| Where Is Amnesty International When You Need Them? | |
|
by Beth Gottfried, February 22, 2007
|
|
MubarakThe first guy in a group of Egyptian bloggers that were indicted by the government last year was given a four year jail sentence for insulting Islam and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Abdel Karim Suleiman, a 22-year-old former law student who has been in custody since November, was the first blogger to stand trial in Egypt for his Internet writings. He was convicted in connection with eight articles he wrote since 2004.Rights groups and opposition bloggers have watched Suleiman's case closely, and said they feared a conviction could set a legal precedent limiting Internet freedom in Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country.
A fellow blogger who runs the "Rantings of a Sandmonkey" blog said: "It's a dangerous precedent because it will impact the only free space available now, which is the Internet. The charges were undefined and vague."
"Tell me. What does insulting the president mean? What is the difference between criticising religion and being in contempt of religion?" he added, asking to remain anonymous.
The Internet has emerged as a major forum for critics of the Egyptian government to express their views in a country where the states runs large newspapers and main television stations.
![]() |
Beth Gottfried Lisogorsky is a professional blogger whose work has appeared on numerous sites from Rotten Tomatoes to PopMatters. She loves film, TV (yes "the boob tube"), and music and has critiqued on all three. In 2004, she published a book More... |
Michael Nehora
Egyptian blogger Suleiman
Actually Beth, his case is today's [[http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGMDE120062007|top story]] on the Amnesty International website. Only they give his name as Karim Amer.
Beth Gottfried
ahhhh
I was being a bit cheeky, but yes I caught the Karim Amer story. Thanks!
Anonymous
And Egypt is considerd to be
And Egypt is considerd to be among the more liberal contries in the Arab world.
Post new comment