Sat, 22/10/2011 - 14:42
An
Egyptian court has sentenced a Facebook user to three years' prison for
creating a page on the social networking site to publish opinions
thought to be offensive to Islam and the Prophet Mohamed.
Judge
Sherif Kamel, head of the Azbakiya Court of First Instance, said Ayman
Youssef Mansour created the page “Al-Monadel Mard” on Facebook and used
it to express opinions that threaten national unity. Mansour’s opinions
were seen by the court as derogatory to Islam.
This
is the second court ruling against online content considered by a court
to be in "contempt of religion" according to article 98(f) of the Penal
Code, amended in 2006.
The
article stipulates that: “Whoever exploits religion in order to promote
extremist ideologies by word of mouth, in writing or in any other
manner, with a view to stirring up sedition, disparaging or holding in
contempt any divine religion or its adherents, or endangering national
unity, shall be punished with imprisonment for between six months and
five years or a fine of at least LE500.”
Egypt's
first case of online “contempt of religion" concerned the blogger Abdel
Kareem Amer, arrested in 2006 on charges of insulting Islam and
then-President Hosni Mubarak on his blog. He was sentenced to four years
in prison and expelled from university.
Local
and international human rights watchdogs have criticized the
criminalization of contempt of religion, saying that the language used
to describe such crimes is vague, with imprecise terms such as
“extremist ideologies,” “sedition” and “national unity.” Activists say
the article is being used by the government to target political
dissidents and suppress freedoms of belief and opinion.
In
August scores of complaints were sent to the Ministry of Interior
accusing the Facebook page in question of being offensive to Islam.
The
Department for Combating Electronic Crimes at the Ministry of Interior
identified the location in which Mansour wrote the comments. He was
arrested and the prosecutors charged him with insulting Islam and
inciting sedition.
The
court said that it reached the conclusion that “the accused person
[Mansour] deliberately insulted Islam and mocked the religion. His
phrases were offensive to Islam, the Quran and the prophet.”
Judge
Kamel said that the case was brought to court by the prosecution
office. He added that the prosecutors were sure that this was the
accused’s Facebook account, and that Mansour admitted that making the
statements.
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