
A Saudi court
has commuted the death sentence against a Palestinian poet on charges of
apostasy and abandoning his Muslim faith to eight years in jail and 800
lashes, his lawyer said.
Ashraf Fayadh was detained by the country’s religious police in 2013
in Abha, southwest Saudi Arabia, and rearrested and tried in early 2014.
The new ruling, posted by Fayadh’s lawyer, Abdul-Rahman al-Lahim, on
his Twitter account said that the court has decided to “go back on the
previous death sentence” but confirmed the charges that had prompted the
death penalty.
“The accused is sentenced to a punishment of eight years in jail and
800 lashes divided into instalments, 50 lashes for each instalment,” the
ruling stated, according to the Twitter posting.
A spokesman for Saudi Arabia’s justice ministry could not immediately be reached for comment.
Fayadh’s conviction was based on evidence from a prosecution witness
who claimed to have heard him cursing God, Islam’s Prophet Mohammad and
Saudi Arabia, and the contents of a poetry book he had written years
earlier.
A lower court had previously sentenced Fayadh to four years in prison
and 800 lashes. The case went to the Saudi appeals court and was then
returned to the lower court, where a different judge last November 17
increased the sentence to death.
The second judge ruled defence witnesses who had challenged the prosecution witness’ testimony ineligible.
Saudi Arabia’s justice system is based on sharia, or Islamic law, and
its judges are clerics from the kingdom’s ultra conservative Wahhabi
school of Sunni Islam. In the Wahhabi interpretation of sharia,
religious crimes including blasphemy and apostasy incur the death
penalty.
Liberal writer Raif Badawi was flogged 50 times in January last year
after his sentencing to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes for
blasphemy, prompting an international outcry. Badawi remains in prison,
but diplomats have said he is unlikely to be flogged again.
Saudi judges have extensive scope to impose sentences according to
their own interpretation of sharia without reference to any previous
cases. After a case has been heard by lower courts, appeals courts and
the supreme court, a convicted defendant can be pardoned by King Salman.
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