Monday, May 17, 2010

Kuwaiti blogger on hunger strike admitted to hospital



A Kuwaiti blogger has been hospitalised after going on hunger strike to protest his detention over acusations he had insulted the ruler, his lawyer said on Sunday.




Mohammad Abdul-Kader al-Jassem has refused to eat or take heart medicine since Wednesday evening, the day after he was detained following a complaint against him from the ruler's office, his attorney Abdullah al-Ahmad told Reuters.
The blogger and journalist, who is a staunch critic of the government, was accused of insulting the Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, and inciting the overthrow of the government, according to his lawyer.

A government spokesman could not be reached for comment.
"His health deteriorated and he was taken to the military hospital yesterday," his lawyer said, adding that he did not have any more details about his client's condition.
Jassem was drinking water, but refused to eat or take his medicine until the complaint against him was withdrawn, he said, adding that Jassem believes he could face "a political trial," rather than a criminal one.
On his website, Jassem has directly criticised the ruling family and blamed Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammad al-Sabah, for mismanagement and corruption. The lawyer said Jassem was being questioned about three political books he published after they were licensed by authorities.
He said prosecutors have extended his detention for 21 days pending either a trial or further investigation.
Kuwait, the world's fourth-largest oil exporter, has a free press but many writers and bloggers have been questioned and tried for libel.
The emir is protected from criticism by the constitution.
Freedom of speech campaign group Reporters Without Borders has called for Jassem's immediate release and all charges against him to be dropped.
It said the writer was sentenced in April to six months in prison for slandering the prime minister, but the court suspended the sentence pending an appeal. (Reuters)

3 comments:

Dont.Dwell said...

The definition of freedom in Kuwait differs than that of the english dictionary :)

HAMAD said...

Dont.Dwell : welcome to Kuwait !! everything is different in Q8 !

Dont.Dwell said...

Yup, Bs il mshkla ina those people looking for "freedom" are the ones most confused with this term.

Same goes with a lot of issues in Kuwait, we're good at complaining, however when it comes to actions most choose to do it the traditional way.

And then you have to sit there and listen about how corrupted the country is... well what makes a country other than its people?