Egypt: death sentences for anti-Muslim ‘film’

An Egyptian court on Jan. 29 upheld the in absentia death sentences of seven Coptic Christians and an American preacher on charges stemming from the amateur anti-Muslim "film" Innocence of Muslims, which sparked violent protests in the Middle East last year. A criminal court in Cairo sentenced the convicted defendants in November, pending the final verdict just announced. The death sentences are primarily symbolic, as all of the defendants live outside of Egypt. The eight defendants include Mark Basseley Youssef, the California man who produced the film, as well as Florida pastor Terry Jones, who aroused controversy last year by publicly burning a Koran. The film depicts the Prophet Muhammad as a fraud and a womanizer. The court found the defendants guilty of subverting national unity, spreading false information and insulting Islam, charges that carry the death penalty.

Innocence of Muslims has generated a great deal of political, religious and legal controversy. In September an actress who claims she was duped into appearing in the film filed suit in the US District Court for the Northern District of California requesting that the film be removed from YouTube. Earlier in September UN Special Rapporteur Maina Kiai issued a statement condemning the violence that erupted after the film's release. Kiai stated that protests and rallies must be peaceful to be protected by international human rights law and urged the Middle East states to prosecute those responsible for the violence. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay also urged religious and political leaders  to encourage an end to the violence that followed the release of the film.

From Jurist, Jan. 29. Used with permission.
 

  1. Egypt suspends YouTube for broadcasting anti-Islam film
    Egypt’s administrative court ordered the country’s National Telecommunication Regulatory Authority (NTRA) on Feb. 8 to block YouTube because it carried the controversial amateur film Innocence of Muslims. The court declared that YouTube should be blocked because by choosing to carry Innocence of Muslims, it provided a forum for insulting the Prophet Muhammad and disrespecting Islam. The ban is expected to last one month.

    From Jurist, Feb. 9. Used with permission.