Article from
the web-site of the Committee to Protect Journalists:
Not surprising, but certainly disheartening,
to find such a barbaric act in this day and age.
In Mauritania, blogger sentenced to
death for apostasy
(For those of you who may be a bit geographically-challenged,
the country of Mauritania is located in the northwest part of Africa. I had to look that up, since I had no idea
where it was.)
New York,
December 26, 2014--The Committee to Protect Journalists today condemned the
death sentence handed down Wednesday to Mauritanian blogger Mohamed Cheikh Ould
Mohamed on apostasy charges in connection to an article he published a year
ago.
Mohamed was
arrested on January 2, 2014, for his December 31, 2013, article, called
"Religion, religiosity and craftsmen," which said that followers of
Islam interpreted the religion according to circumstance. The article
criticized Mauritania's caste system, an extremely delicate subject, Reuters
reported.
In court,
Mohamed said he had not intended to insult the Prophet Muhammad and had
repented, according to news reports. However, the court proceeded to sentence
him to death, a first on apostasy charges in Mauritania, the reports said.
Local news
reports suggested there were political and religious motives behind the case. A
fatwa was issued to kill Mohamed, and nationwide demonstrations led his family
to denounce him and his lawyer to drop him. No other lawyer other than those
assigned by the court then came forward to take up his case, the reports said.
"We call
on authorities in Mauritania not to carry out this sentence," said Sherif
Mansour, CPJ's Middle East and North Africa program coordinator. "Mohamed
Cheikh Ould Mohamed should be freed and his safety protected."
The trial
began Tuesday but was postponed to Wednesday by the judge after an altercation
broke out in court when the prosecutor admitted to being a member of the caste
that the blogger criticized in his article, according to news reports. Mohamed belongs to a lower
social class.
Local news reports also said the trial was attended
by several religious leaders who insisted on monitoring the proceedings to
ensure Sharia law was carried out. When the defendant was brought to court, the
crowd cheered "Allah Akbar," and then celebrated the verdict,
according to the same reports.
News reports
did not say whether the blogger would appeal. However, the defendant is
eligible to be pardoned by the Supreme Court if his repentance is verified,
according to article 306 of the Mauritanian penal code.
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