KUWAIT CITY (AP) -- A liberal university professor -- tired of legal and verbal assaults from fundamentalists who say he mocks Islam -- has given up his fight for freedom of speech in a country he says has become infested with the "germs and viruses of hatred and tyranny."
Ahmed al-Baghdadi -- sentenced last week to a suspended one-year prison term for mocking Islam -- said he has written his last newspaper column. Earlier, he said he would seek asylum in a Western country to protect his life, his family and his freedom of expression.
On Saturday, the Kuwait University political science professor told The Associated Press he also was considering less drastic options, such as retirement or spending a year abroad, which would be easier on him and his family. "Writing and living in the shadow of fear is impossible, and dignity is above all," al-Baghdadi wrote in his final column Saturday. He said legal battles have broken his only weapon -- his pen -- and there was nothing left for him but to surrender.
Al-Baghdadi's decision came a week after the Appeals Court convicted him of mocking Islam and handed down a suspended one-year prison sentence, overturning an acquittal by a lower court. It also ordered him to pay a $6,825 deposit, which would be forfeited if he commits the same offense within the next three years.
Al-Baghdadi, an archrival of religious extremists who also took him to court in 1999, has appealed the verdict to the higher Cassation Court, but he said Saturday in his final column for the Al-Siyassah daily newspaper that he would not return to writing even if he won the case. "It is not a matter of a court ruling here or a court ruling there," he wrote. "It is the sick climate that is filled with germs and viruses of hatred and tyranny."
The legal battle stemmed from a June 5, 2004, column in which al-Baghdadi wrote that he sent his son to an expensive foreign school rather than a state school because he did not want "ignorant" teachers to teach him "how to disrespect women and non-Muslims." Wrong teachings could lead his son to terrorism, he said. "In short, I want to have a son with an education and a mind I can be proud of, not (a son) with backward thinking," he wrote.
Two Muslim fundamentalists complained to judicial authorities about the column and al-Baghdadi was tried and acquitted by a misdemeanor court. The Appeals Court, however, ruled the professor had made "derogatory" comments about Islam by linking terrorism and "backward thinking" to religious classes at state schools.
For more than a decade, this small, oil-rich ally of Washington has been pulled between politically strong fundamentalists, who want to fully implement Sharia, or Islamic law, and the less powerful Westernized liberals, who call for more democracy and freedom of expression. The 1962 constitution guarantees freedom of expression but laws penalize those who insult the country's religion.
In his farewell column, al-Baghdadi said he could not play "the Kuwaiti roulette" by continuing to write without knowing when the next court case would come. The U.S.-educated al-Baghdadi, who specializes in political Islam, has been campaigning for years against fundamentalists who he said "terrorize" writers and journalists.
"If terrorism spreads, nobody will be spared. Everyone could be gripped by the neck for a word or a joke unsuspiciously uttered, and accused of being against religion," he wrote in a December 1999 column. That year, al-Baghdadi was convicted of blaspheming Islam when he wrote that the Prophet Mohammed initially failed to convert nonbelievers in the holy city of Mecca.Kuwait's emir, Sheik Jaber Al Ahmed Al Sabah, pardoned the professor and he was released from prison after serving about half of his one-month sentence.
Well I, and many other bloggers, have said things far worse than Dr. Al-Baghdadi. Are they coming after us next?
you never know zaydoun. we have to wait and see.
ReplyDeleteكلمات البغدادي كانت موجعة فيي آخر مقال له قبل أن يترك الكتابة .
يجب أن يتحرك الشارع الكويتي لنصرة هؤلاء الكتاب.
Keep on dreaming guys, good times never last, there are few spies around us and I feel it?s only a matter of time.
ReplyDeleteZaydoun antom alsabigoon wa na7no ella7igoon. LOL
وأرى ان الموسيقى وتنمية الذوق الفني أهم من تحفيظ القرآن ودروس الدين ? ولا اريد لابني ان يتلقى دروسا من جهلة يعلمونه عدم احترام المرأة وغير المسلم.
ReplyDeleteIs this it? Is this what the big fuss is all about? I kept reading his article over and over, and aside from these two few lines, I don?t see the big deal. He?s not mocking Islam (since that?s a big no-no). He?s merely saying that he?d rather have his son develop an aesthetic taste instead of memorize the Quran. You?re right, Zaydoun. I?ve read stronger lines in these blogs.
Someone, in some other blog (I don?t recall which one now) said something to the effect that Albaghdadi should know how to hold his tongue since he knows that such words won?t be accepted. But don?t we need to speak up against injustices, even if it meant our death? I don?t claim to have that courage, but if another person shows it, I?ll be all cheers. I?m sorry for the turn of events in this case but I guess we needed a scapegoat. I wish he changes his mind about not writing again. The case seems to be taking heroic proportions, especially in blogville, so I?m keeping my fingers crossed that our man is as heroic as we imagine him to be.
Mr. Z
ReplyDeleteإذا بلوغ بوحفص مانعينه، تهقى إنت مو متراقب
المصيبة بالعملية، إن البغدادي ما سب الإسلام. أهو إتهم وبشكل عام بالأحرى قذفهم. فكيف حكم مثل هذا يطلع. ودي أحصل على حيثيات الحكم عشان أعرف المادة إللي إستندوا عليها بالضبط للربط بين ما كتبه وبين بس الدين
SH
ReplyDeleteمنع موقع أبو حفص من قبل فاست تلكو لأسباب دينية ومن جلفنت لأنه تطنز على الشيوخ... مادري عن كيمس وكواليتي نت
This is only somewhat related to the issue:
ReplyDeleteI was once in a meeting at a Government school and heard the frustrated music teacher blaming the parents for forbidding their children to attend music class.
She said as a teacher I am responsible for my students. But how do I deal with a kid who stands outside the music room and stubbornly refuses to enter, becasue his parents have told him not to and that music is 7aram.
What do you think we are doing in music class, she asked the parents? Do you think it is provocative songs and dancing? All anasheed and patriotic songs as approved by the ministry of education.
As for Al-Baghdadi, people have said far worse. But if you don't have stong backing & support from the groups that matter, if you are not affiliated through familial & business ties, then anything can be held against you.
His crime is that he spoke his mind sincerely, in his usual outspoken way. Because if he didn't care about this country, why would he risk his and his family's peace of mind?
There are so few people left who have this country's welfare in their hearts. The least we can do is support those who have the courage to speak out against injustice and wrong doings.
تم حجم موقع بو حفص من كوالتي نت بس الغريب انه صفحة الحجب اول مره اشوفها
ReplyDelete403Forbidden
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اول شي اعتقدت خلل في الانترنت بس استعملت بروكسي فتح الموقع.
هل هذه بداية حجب البلوغات