Reporters Without Borders: “This sentence is a disgrace… a slap in the face”
February 22nd, 2007From Reporters Without Borders:
22 February 2007
Four-year prison sentence for blogger “Kareem Amer”
Reporters Without Borders strongly condemned the four-year prison sentence imposed today by a court in Alexandria on Abdel Kareem Nabil Suleiman for “inciting hatred of Islam” and insulting President Hosni Mubarak in his blog, for which he used the pseudonym of “Kareem Amer.”
“This sentence is a disgrace,” the press freedom organisation said. “Almost three years ago to the day, President Mubarak promised to abolish prison sentences for press offences. Suleiman’s conviction and sentence is a message of intimidation to the rest of the Egyptian blogosphere, which had emerged in recent years as an effective bulwark against the regime’s authoritarian excesses.”
Reporters Without Borders continued: “As a result of this conviction, which clearly confirms Egypt’s inclusion in our list of Internet enemies, we call on the United Nations to reject Egypt’s request to host the Internet Governance Forum in 2009. After letting Tunisia, another violator of online freedom, host the World Summit on the Information Society, such a choice would completely discredit the UN process for debating the future of the Internet.”
The organisation added: “This heavy sentence is also a slap in the face for the international organisations and governments that support President Mubarak’s policies. It is time the international community took a stand on Egypt’s repeated violations of press freedom and the rights of Internet users.”
Suleiman, who was arrested on 6 November 2006, got three years for inciting hatred of Islam and one year for insulting the president. The judge dismissed the charge of “spreading rumours liable to disturb the peace” which had been included in the prosecution’s indictment. Suleiman’s blogs regularly criticised the government’s religious and authoritarian excesses. He also criticised Egypt’s highest religious institutions including the Sunni university of Al-Azhar, where he studied law.
Egypt is on the list of the 13 Internet enemies which Reporters Without Borders compiled in 2006. The government wants to host one of the stages of the Internet Governance Forum, a series of UN-sponsored negotiations about how to regulate the Internet (see: http://www.intgovforum.org/).
On 23 February 2004, the newly-elected president of the Union of Egyptian Journalists, Galal Aref, made an important announcement: President Mubarak had just telephoned him and had formally undertaken to abolish prison sentences for journalists in connection with their work. In effect, he was promising a major overhaul of the laws concerning press offences. Three years later, nothing has changed. Journalists still risk being imprisoned despite the semblance of a reform last year.
Reporters Without Borders believes that people writing online, like professional journalists, should enjoy the basic right to freedom of expression and it condemns any use of prison sentences to punish offences linked to the publication of views and information.
Previous updates on Kareem Amer by Reporters Without Borders are available here.



February 23rd, 2007 at 3:15 am
liberdade de expressao e o minimo que os povos merecem
pensamento livre ja em todo o mundo inclusive islamicos
liberdade para karem
February 23rd, 2007 at 8:32 am
No man in any land should be imprisoned for speaking his mind. If a man can’t say what is in his heart he has no real freedom at all. His freedom becomes only what is given, freedom to serve them that would silence him. When a man being silenced from a truth he belives, the truth repressed in his heart will create a negitive force he cannot control. Let all people speak what they believe is truth so all men can be free. Is one man so powerfull he can offend so many with his personel point of view?
From: New Hampshire, US (state motto: “live free or die”
February 23rd, 2007 at 8:39 am
Also, should he sit in a cell for four years, though his body be caged, won’t he remain more free than many walking around in silence?
February 23rd, 2007 at 10:41 am
DECLARACIÓN UNIVERSAL DE LOS DERECHOS HUMANOS:
Todo individuo tiene derecho a la libertad de opinión y de expresión; este derecho incluye el de no ser molestado a causa de sus opiniones, el de investigar y recibir informaciones y opiniones, y el de difundirlas, sin limitación de fronteras, por cualquier medio de expresión.
Todo mi apoyo para el que ha tenido la valentía de enfrentarse a los islamistas en su terreno.
¡LIBERTAD PARA KAREM!
March 7th, 2007 at 1:44 pm
[…] And a report about the latest update (http://www.freekareem.org/2007/02/22/reporters-without-borders-this-sentence-is-a-disgrace-a-slap-in-the-face/ ) likened the sentence to a “slap in the face,” which was sadly ironic, for an AP reporter claimed to hear the sound of a slap and a cry of pain just minutes after Kareem’s sentence was handed down. (May the hand of Kareem’s slapper fall off.) Talking of sentencing, Kareem’s own lawyer, Gamal Eid, was said to be “pessimistic” about the outcome of the case beforehand, although he’s reported more faith in the actual appeal he’s planning to file. (Thanks be to God that Egypt actually allows appeals to be filed.. not that this makes the Kafka-esque mockery of a trial any easier to swallow, but.. I suppose we need to crawl before we run marathons..) […]