PDA

View Full Version : Sentenced to death: Afghan who dared to read about women's rights



eskachig
02-01-2008, 01:55 PM
By Kim Sengupta
Thursday, 31 January 2008

A young man, a student of journalism, is sentenced to death by an Islamic court for downloading a report from the internet. The sentence is then upheld by the country's rulers. This is Afghanistan – not in Taliban times but six years after "liberation" and under the democratic rule of the West's ally Hamid Karzai.

The fate of Sayed Pervez Kambaksh has led to domestic and international protests, and deepening concern about erosion of civil liberties in Afghanistan. He was accused of blasphemy after he downloaded a report from a Farsi website which stated that Muslim fundamentalists who claimed the Koran justified the oppression of women had misrepresented the views of the prophet Mohamed.

Mr Kambaksh, 23, distributed the tract to fellow students and teachers at Balkh University with the aim, he said, of provoking a debate on the matter. But a complaint was made against him and he was arrested, tried by religious judges without – say his friends and family – being allowed legal representation and sentenced to death.

The Independent is launching a campaign today to secure justice for Mr Kambaksh. The UN, human rights groups, journalists' organisations and Western diplomats have urged Mr Karzai's government to intervene and free him. But the Afghan Senate passed a motion yesterday confirming the death sentence.

The MP who proposed the ruling condemning Mr Kambaksh was Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, a key ally of Mr Karzai. The Senate also attacked the international community for putting pressure on the Afghan government and urged Mr Karzai not to be influenced by outside un-Islamic views.

The case of Mr Kambaksh, who also worked a s reporter for the Jahan-i-Naw (New World) newspaper, is seen in Afghanistan as yet another chapter in the escalation in the confrontation between Afghanistan and the West.

It comes in the wake of Mr Karzai accusing the British of actually worsening the situation in Helmand province by their actions and his subsequent blocking of the appointment of Lord Ashdown as the UN envoy and expelling a British and an Irish diplomat.

Demonstrations, organised by clerics, against the alleged foreign interference have been held in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, where Mr Kambaksh was arrested. Aminuddin Muzafari, the first secretary of the houses of parliament, said: "People should realise that as we are representatives of an Islamic country therefore we can never tolerate insults to reverences of Islamic religion."

At a gathering in Takhar province, Maulavi Ghulam Rabbani Rahmani, the heads of the Ulema council, said: "We want the government and the courts to execute the court verdict on Kambaksh as soon as possible." In Parwan province, another senior cleric, Maulavi Muhammad Asif, said: "This decision is for disrespecting the holy Koran and the government should enforce the decision before it came under more pressure from foreigners."

UK officials say they are particularly concerned about such draconian action being taken against a journalist. The Foreign Office and Department for International Development has donated large sums to the training of media workers in the country. The Government funds the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) in the Helmand capital, Lashkar Gar.

Mr Kambaksh's brother, Sayed Yaqub Ibrahimi, is also a journalist and has written articles for IWPR in which he accused senior public figures, including an MP, of atrocities, including murders. He said: "Of course we are all very worried about my brother. What has happened to him is very unjust. He has not committed blasphemy and he was not even allowed to have a legal defence. and what took place was a secret trial."

Qayoum Baabak, the editor of Jahan-i-Naw, said a senior prosecutor in Mazar-i-Sharif, Hafiz Khaliqyar, had warned journalists that they would be punished if they protested against the death sentence passed on Mr Kambaksh.

Jean MacKenzie, country director for IWPR, said: "We feel very strongly that this is designed to put pressure on Pervez's brother, Yaqub, who has done some of the hardest-hitting pieces outlining abuses by some very powerful commanders."

Rahimullah Samander, the president of the Afghan Independent Journalists' Association, said: "This is unfair, this is illegal. He just printed a copy of something and looked at it and read it. How can we believe in this 'democracy' if we can't even read, we can't even study? We are asking Mr Karzai to quash the death sentence before it is too late."

The circumstances surrounding the conviction of Mr Kambaksh are also being viewed as a further attempt to claw back the rights gained by women since the overthrow of the Taliban. The most prominent female MP, Malalai Joya, has been suspended after criticising her male colleagues.

Under the Afghan constitution, say legal experts, Mr Kambaksh has the right to appeal to the country's supreme court. Some senior clerics maintain, however, that since he has been convicted under religious laws, the supreme court should not bring secular interpretations to the case.

Mr Karzai has the right to intervene and pardon Mr Kambaksh. However, even if he is freed, it would be hard for the student to escape retribution in a country where fundamentalists and warlords are increasingly in the ascendancy.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/sentenced-to-death-afghan-who-dared-to-read-about-womens-rights-775972.html

If we're propping up the Afgan government it seems like we should do something about this. Otherwise we're allowing a repressive theocracy to flourish with our military and financial support.

avedis
02-01-2008, 05:25 PM
a culture that has been enforced with an iron fist for hundreds of years isnt going to change just because we went in.....modernity takes time in that region.
I have high optimism though.
remember this : http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/03/28/christian.convert/index.html

eskachig
02-01-2008, 05:48 PM
I don't expect speedy change in attitudes, but the fact that Afgani constitution allows to sentence someone to death for blasphemy is just kind of bizarre. In the days of the Bonn agreement we could've done something about this, and we should have. It would help protect the country from being so ****e to extremism.

avedis
02-01-2008, 06:11 PM
Im not too familiar with the US constitution or laws.....but isnt it true that a person guilty of treason can be excecuted....but the US doesnt enforce that part of the law in this day and age.

it will get to that eventually over there. I hope..

eskachig
02-01-2008, 06:24 PM
Im not too familiar with the US constitution or laws.....but isnt it true that a person guilty of treason can be excecuted....but the US doesnt enforce that part of the law in this day and age.Of course it enforces the law, as it should. Treason is a federal crime, defined in the US constitution. I don't have a problem with capital punishment, just its justification in this case.

Blasphemy can be treason.... but only in a theocracy. And that's the last thing that region needs.

avedis
02-01-2008, 06:47 PM
I agree with you 100% .....i think we just differ in optimism

4X4Driver
02-01-2008, 08:02 PM
Folks, if you've already signed the Independent's petition, please take couple of minutes to sign the one started by the Turkish newspaper Hürriyet also. It's in English and similar to the Independent's petition.

Turkey and Afghanistan has historic ties and it might help putting pressure on the Afghan gov't from various governments.

Link to the story and the petition.

http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/dunya/8151022.asp?gid=200&sz=52104


Thanks.

Hollis
02-01-2008, 08:19 PM
4X4, thanks for the petition. I hope it works. I added my name to the list.

H.

afreu
02-01-2008, 08:41 PM
Good initative by Hurriyet!

muck
02-01-2008, 09:05 PM
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/sentenced-to-death-afghan-who-dared-to-read-about-womens-rights-775972.html
Otherwise we're allowing a repressive theocracy to flourish with our military and financial support.
Indeed, it's good to know that so many soldiers of Western nations made the ultimate sacrifice to 'successfully' bring the rule of law to Afghanistan, not the rule of insanity.
But the latter is our point of view. How shall the West react on this incident if not with reservation? Once we've promised that we came to Afghanistan to oust the Taliban and to let the Afghans create their own nation with their own ideas. What we witness now is unfortunately the outcome.

vinny_121_ND
02-01-2008, 09:24 PM
Seems like the clerics don't want the population asking questions. Might as well continue living without internet if people want to live. Well, paradise is better than internet.

WarDancer
02-01-2008, 09:53 PM
Gotta love the twelve century!! Is it any wonder why these countries are where they are.

gregoralex
02-02-2008, 09:16 AM
Who made this sentence??Who are pigs!!!

haze99
02-03-2008, 07:41 AM
Yep, just like having elections in Gaza! So much for "freedom" and "democracy". I can't wait to see what the people of Pakistan vote for soon! Yeah, rock the vote!

Johnny_H02
02-03-2008, 07:45 AM
yeah, I mean if this is the sort of rule of law Afghanistan's new government is imposing ? how are they any different from the Taliban?

Dercius
02-03-2008, 11:55 AM
Gotta love the twelve century!! Is it any wonder why these countries are where they are.

Yeah, XII century rocks all over the middle east:slap::bash::-*$:fork:, excepting some places :).

4X4Driver
02-03-2008, 08:31 PM
4X4, thanks for the petition. I hope it works. I added my name to the list.

H.

Thanks guys. I hear so far 250k people signed it already. I hope it grows more and helps at the end.

4X4Driver
02-06-2008, 10:45 AM
Finally the good news :) The execution will not be carried out.


Afghan government official says that student will not be executed

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/afghan-government-official-says-that-student-will-not-be-executed-778686.html


Hürriyet says; You all have saved this young man with the 500.000 petition you've sent via Hürriyet.

http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/dunya/8180136.asp?gid=229&sz=52092

eskachig
02-06-2008, 12:44 PM
Great news! But the very fact that it happened is worrying. The comparison with Holocaust denial is ludicrous in my opinion.

ting
12-17-2009, 10:54 AM
I just read this in a Norwegian newspaper. Apparently he was smugled out of the country after Karzai pardoned him back in September. He had been staying covertly with Kai Eide from July.

Google translated version:

Brought doomed man to freedom

While Kai Eide in August organized the presidential election as UN special envoy in Afghanistan, he hid the condemned Afghaneren Sayed Pervez Kambaksh.

Kabul / Oslo (Dagbladet): Two years ago, the Afghan student journalist Sayed Pervez Kambaksh (24) sentenced to death for having downloaded a report from the Internet on an interpretation of women's rights in relation to Islam and spread it to their fellow students.

Dagbladet has talked with several sources that tell how the doomed Kambaksh was taken from prison and smuggled out of Afghanistan with the help of, among other things, Afghan writers, Kai Eide, the Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, the Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre and the Norwegian and Afghan PEN-club.

• Read also: Jonas Gahr Støre took up the issue with Karzai.

In danger
Dødsdommen to Afghanistan's most famous prisoner of conscience, Kambaksh, was eventually commuted to 20 years in prison, but 24-year-old was in constant peril. When Dagbladet met him in January this year, he sat in a cell with seven others. He dared not leave the cell because so many of the other convicts agreed with fundamentalists at any time saw him hanged.

Kambaksh had been released in Afghan society, he had been forced to live in constant fear of becoming yet another victim of the Islamist violence.

New country
Therefore, it was so important for the UN special envoy in Afghanistan, Kai Eide, to not only get him released, but also protect him and give him a new and safe country to live in. Eide felt good to Kambaksh case before he took the job as UN Special Representative in Afghanistan. In September last year started the Norwegian involvement to get the young man free.

"I had hoped that the Supreme Court to process the appeal before the New Year, so we could get him out well before the election. It failed, says UN Special Envoy to Afghanistan, Kai Eide, told Dagbladet.

In April this year failed Eide in an attempt to get him free. But in late July, it was suddenly an opening. Only a few weeks before the presidential election 20 August, Afghans successor was released from prison and secretly handed over custody of Eide.

-It was the run-up to the election and I was pretty nervous about how we would get him out of the country, "Eide said.

Secret
Complete secrecy was necessary. The fear of leakage was intrusive.

The only people who at the time knew about the case, was Eides very closest advisers. In two weeks, while the Afghans went to the presidential election, was 24-year-old in Eide's custody. The worry now was how to get Kambaksh out of Afghanistan.

In addition to the Afghan President Hamid Karzai to sign an amnesty on humanitarian grounds of prisoner of conscience. But how few Kambaksh out without being discovered - with the danger that the supporters of the death sentence stirred up a dangerous mood?

It was difficult to get visas to European countries at the time, and Kai Eide and his closest visited several embassies, without success. Finally they arranged a passport for him, with a Norwegian visa.

Flew to Stockholm
The departure golden opportunity opened up when the Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt arrived in Kabul with the government's private. Carl Bildt was called up in the morning, the day he would leave Afghanistan.

Could Kambaksh join to Stockholm?

The answer was immediately yes, and one of Eide's advisers were with Bildt and Kambaksh on a plane to Stockholm. From Sweden they drove to Oslo, where Kambaksh were accommodated in hotels. The Norwegian helpers arranged new clothes, and Norwegian friends took Afghans shoulder with sightseeing in Oslo. Eide also came to Oslo, on vacation, and had Afghans shoulder at noon. Kambaksh also met with Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre.

Relaxed in Oslo
-It was not until he arrived in Oslo that he relaxed. For here in Kabul with me, there was also a prison, but a better one. And he was in constant fear that something would go wrong and be sent back to the cell. Physically he was in fine form, but he was mentally exhausted after 20 months locked up, "Eide said, and continues:

-When we were out walking tour of the streets Kambaksh said jokingly that the NOK is the only place we both can go without guards, laughing Eide. He is strongly influenced by its relationship with the young Afghans shoulder, which he has fought for over a year, next to the UN perhaps toughest job.

The work succeeded at last: After a week in Oslo had Kambaksh residence permit in a country Dagbladet can not disclose the name of, for safety reasons.

Symbolsak
-Why was this single issue so important?

-Kambaksh was a symbolsak in human rights work, as it was important to have a positive output on. He was in danger in prison and he would be in danger outside.

-Why was Norway who helped him out?

-It is NOK many countries who take up such matters, but few countries that follow them up properly. In this case it turned out that only a handful of western countries that kept to the case, and in Norway was mainly in the continuous working and power.

PEN central
Norwegian PEN has been a key player for the release of Kambakhsh from the start, in cooperation with the forces within Afghan PEN, especially the well-known author Dr. Samay Hamed. Afghanistan-known and vice chairman of the PEN, Elisabeth Eide, was active in the process. She also held a Dinner Kambaksh when he was in Oslo in September.

-In addition, several Afghan writers involved in the case, and there have been campaigns for Kambaksh in many provinces in Afghanistan. Dr. Hamed has also forced both the government and the president himself, "said Elisabeth Eide, and continues:

"We have also had talks with Foreign Minister and with Kai Eide as both have shown great enthusiasm. We are very happy for the solution Kai Eide was able.

Kai Eide has been criticized by his former deputy, Peter Galbraith, for having too uncritical relationship with President Karzai.

-This case shows how important it is that I can talk to the president for all difficult cases. It's just the way it is possible to gain acceptance, "said Eide.

• Read also: Jonas Gahr Støre took up the issue with Karzai.


Read also previous issues of Kambaksh:
• Sayed was sentenced to death for reading about gender equality.
• 20 years in prison to read about equality.

There is also a fact box and pictures:
http://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&sl=no&tl=en&u=http://www.dagbladet.no/2009/12/16/nyheter/kai_eide/afghanistan/utenriks/fn/9538200/&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com&twu=1&usg=ALkJrhjfNBRYZdGOCVV7fqLt5hteEvTjVA


Original in Norwegian:
http://www.dagbladet.no/2009/12/16/nyheter/kai_eide/afghanistan/utenriks/fn/9538200/


I know it's an old post. But I think it's worth updating since this story has a happy ending.woot

Hollis
12-17-2009, 11:15 AM
Good news, thanks for the update.

annihilation
12-17-2009, 08:28 PM
a culture that has been enforced with an iron fist for hundreds of years isnt going to change just because we went in.....modernity takes time in that region.
I have high optimism though.
remember this : http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/03/28/christian.convert/index.html



Then we pick up our bags and leave. Its not worth our time, blood, or effort to deal and lift people if they will continue to do this. We should only go in an area and help setup a democracy when the are ready. Till that point comes they can continue to do their BS within their lands.

vinny_121_ND
12-17-2009, 09:18 PM
Then we pick up our bags and leave. Its not worth our time, blood, or effort to deal and lift people if they will continue to do this. We should only go in an area and help setup a democracy when the are ready. Till that point comes they can continue to do their BS within their lands.

We (canadians) had the same feelings when a constitution drafted said men were allowed to rape their wife/wives. (Women shouldn't be allowed to withhold *** was the defense). I'm not sure if the constitution was further revised since it was only a draft.