Sunday, January 20, 2008

Belarus Editor Jailed For Islam Cartoon

According to the AP, a Belarus court sentenced a newspaper editor last Friday to three years in prison for reprinting a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad that sparked worldwide riots when it was initially published in a Danish newspaper. The Minsk City Court imposed its sentence after a closed-door trial.

President Alexander Lukashenko ordered the small-circulation Zhoda newspaper shut in February 2006 when Alexander Sdvizhkov, the former deputy editor, published the caricatures which had originally appeared in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. Calling the publication of the cartoons "a provocation against the state," this past November President Lukashenko ordered Sdvizhkov's arrest on charges that he was "inciting religious hatred."

The President's action and the court's sycophantic secret trial and sentence makes little sense since the ex-Soviet republic of Belarus is overwhelmingly Orthodox Christian; less than 1 percent of the country's 10 million is Muslim. There is no friction between Russians and Muslims. Even Belarusian Islamic leader Ismail Voronovich called the sentence excessively harsh.

Many contend the real reason that Sdvizhkov was charged and convicted of this "crime" was that he continued to speak out against the dictatorial President Lukashenko, so Lukashenko dreamed up an excuse to imprison him.

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