به صفحه حمزه کاشغری را آزاد کنید بپیوندید لطفا کلیک کنید
به این صفحه بپیوندید آن را جهانی کنید و از آزادی بیان و جان این جوان دفاع کنید پیامها حمایتها نظرات و نفرت خود از این اقدام را به زبانهای مختلف در این صفه بگزارید و آن را به دیگران نیز بشناسانید .
(حمزه کاشغری) خبرنگار اهل جده عربستان سعودی، در مالزی بازداشت و قرار است تحویل به عربستان داده شود، او را محکوم به اعدام به اتهام اهانت به پيامبر اسلام کرده اند.
حمزه کاشغری ، خبرنگار اهل جده عربستان سعودی که شب تولد محمد(پیامبر اسلام) این جمله رو خطاب به او توییت کرد (در تویتر): در روز تولدت هر جا که نگاه میکنم شما رو میبینم، بعضی وقت ها عاشق شخصیت شما هستم و گاهی هم از شما نفرت دارم، در هر صورت من برای ...شما دعا نخواهم کرد.u.
حمزه بلافاصله بعد از این تویت تهدید به مرگ شد و مجبور به فرار به مالزی شد. وی در مالزی دستگیر شده و امروز تحویل مقامات سعودی خواهد شد. وی به طور قطع اعدام خواهد شد.
توییت دوم حمزه: هیچ زن سعودی به جهنم نخواهد رفت چون که محال است کسی جهنم را برای بار دوم تجربه کند.
توییت آخر حمزه خطاب به محمد: در روز تولد شما در مقابل شما به سجده نخواهم افتاد، بلکه ترجیح میدم مثل دو انسان برابر دست شما را بفشارم و به شما خواهم خندید همانطور که شما به من میخندید. من با شما مثل یک دوست برابر صحبت خواهم کرد و نه بیش از این.
هم میهنان عزیز برای حمایت از این جوان آزادی بیان و نشان دادن آزادی خواهی ایرانی ها به این صفحه بپیوندید
به صفحه حمزه کاشغری را آزاد کنید بپیوندید لطفا کلیک کنید https://www.facebook.com/freehamzakashgar

in Defense of Hamza Kashgari
By Pascal Menoret, Assistant Professor of Middle East Studies at NYU-AD, Author of The Saudi Enigma: A History (ZedBooks 2005)
On the birthday of the Prophet (February 4th), Hamza Kashgari, a 23-year old Saudi journalist, posted the following on Twitter:
“1- On your birthday, I will say that I have loved the rebel in you, that you've always been a source of inspiration to me, and that I do not like the halos of divinity around you. I shall not pray for you.
2- On your birthday, I find you wherever I turn. I will say that I have loved aspects of you, hated others, and could not understand many more.
3- On your birthday, I shall not bow to you. I shall not kiss your hand. Rather, I shall shake it as equals do, and smile at you as you smile at me. I shall speak to you as a friend, no more.” (Translated from Arabic)
The Saudi public reacted vigorously, thousands of Internet users calling for his arrest, trial and execution for blasphemy. Hamza Kashgari immediately posted a retraction and an apology on Twitter. A Facebook page entitled “The Saudi people want the execution of Hamza Kashgari” was created (it boasts today, February 12th, more than 18,000 members).
On February 5th a famous Islamist activist, sheikh Nasir al-Omar, dedicated his regular lesson (watched on youtube by hundreds of thousands) to the issue and called for the eradication of blasphemy and the execution of Hamza Kashgari. Thousands of faxes and telegrams were sent to the Saudi Royal Court while thousands of lawsuits were filed against him within Saudi Arabia. Dozens of thousands of angry Twitter and Facebook users were calling for his death, posting his address online and disclosing details about his family. The scale of the campaign is explained by the fact that, according to several witnesses, organized Islamist activists were following Hamza Kashgari’s writings since many months, waiting for an opportunity to get at him.
On February 6th, Hamza Kashgari left Saudi Arabia for New Zealand via Kuala Lumpur. While looking for a connecting flight at Kuala Lumpur airport he was arrested and detained. Later that same day, the Saudi King, Abdallah bin Abdelaziz Al Saud, ordered Hamza Kashgari’s arrest and interrogation.
On February 7th, the Saudi Permanent Fatwa Committee convened under the presidency of sheikh Abdelaziz Al al-Sheikh, General Mufti of Saudi Arabia, and published an official communiqué describing Hamza Kashgari as an apostate and a heretic – an accusation that in Saudi courts carries the death penalty. The Saudi minister of Culture and Information banned Hamza Kashgari from publication.
The Kashgari case has mobilized human rights organizations, fellow journalists, academics and the general public worldwide. More than 4,000 people have signed a petition asking the Malaysian authorities not to deport him to Saudi Arabia, where he would face an unfair trial and the perspective of a death penalty. Many more have signed an open letter to Malaysian Prime Minister to the same effect.
Hamza Kashgari has been detained incommunicado by the Malaysian authorities, which refused him the right to consult a lawyer. He has been handed over to the Saudi police on the morning of February 12th despite a court order obtained by his lawyers to prevent his extradition.
هیچ نظری موجود نیست:
ارسال یک نظر