NOVANEWS
Ashraf Fayadh
A Palestinian poet and artist has reportedly been sentenced to death by a Saudi Arabian court for abandoning his Muslim faith.
Ashraf Fayadh was first detained by the country’s religious police in 2013 and then rearrested and tried in May 2014.
The court sentenced him to four years in prison and 800 lashes, but an appeal saw a different judge pass a death sentence on Fayadh three days ago, Reuters reports
Adam Coogle, the Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch told the agency: “I have read the trial documents from the lower court verdict in 2014 and another one from 17 November. It is very clear he has been sentenced to death for apostasy.”
Fayadh’s conviction is based on a complaints about his 2008 poetry collection Instructions Within and from a prosecution witness who claimed to have heard him cursing God, Islam’s Prophet Mohammad and Saudi Arabia, which is a Gulf Kingdom governed by ”Sharia law”.
Fayadh, who has curated art shows in Jeddah and at the Venice Biennale told the Guardian the complaint arose from a personal dispute with another artist about contemporary art in a café in Abha.
A Palestinian poet and artist has reportedly been sentenced to death by a Saudi Arabian court for abandoning his Muslim faith.
Ashraf Fayadh was first detained by the country’s religious police in 2013 and then rearrested and tried in May 2014.
The court sentenced him to four years in prison and 800 lashes, but an appeal saw a different judge pass a death sentence on Fayadh three days ago, Reuters reports
Adam Coogle, the Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch told the agency: “I have read the trial documents from the lower court verdict in 2014 and another one from 17 November. It is very clear he has been sentenced to death for apostasy.”
Fayadh’s conviction is based on a complaints about his 2008 poetry collection Instructions Within and from a prosecution witness who claimed to have heard him cursing God, Islam’s Prophet Mohammad and Saudi Arabia, which is a Gulf Kingdom governed by ”Sharia law”.
Fayadh, who has curated art shows in Jeddah and at the Venice Biennale told the Guardian the complaint arose from a personal dispute with another artist about contemporary art in a café in Abha.