World Poetry Day 2016: Take Action for Ashraf Fayadh

Saudi Arabian-born Palestinian poet, artist, curator, Ashraf Fayadh, was initially arrested in August 2013, accused of ‘misguided and misguiding thoughts’ following the submission of a complaint to the Saudi Arabian Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. According to reports, the complaint contended that Fayadh had made obscene comments about God, the Prophet Muhammad, and the Saudi Arabian state. Released on bail, he was rearrested on 1 January 2014 on charges including ‘insulting the divine self’ and having long hair. He has been held in a prison in the city of Abha ever since.

According to court documents seen by PEN International, during his trial held over six hearings between February and May 2014, Fayadh stood accused of numerous blasphemy-related charges, including ‘insulting the divine self and the prophet Mohammed’, ‘spreading atheism’, ‘refuting the Qur’an, and ‘insulting the King and the Kingdom’, among other charges. Evidence compiled against him included at least 10 pages from his collection of poetry Instructions Within, published by the Beirut-based Dar al-Farabi in 2008 and later banned from distribution in Saudi Arabia. Also used as evidence against him were Twitter posts, and conversations he had had in a coffee shop in the city of Abha, where he lived. Fayadh was also accused of having illicit relations with foreign women in connection with images stored on his mobile telephone. English translations of the poetry used in evidence against him are available here. Other poetry by Fayadh, is available here and here.

According to court documents, witness testimony claimed that the complaint submitted to the Saudi Arabian Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice was the result of a personal dispute. During the last session, Fayadh expressed repentance for anything in the book that religious authorities may have deemed insulting, stating “I am repentant to God most high and I am innocent of what appeared in my book mentioned in this case.”

According to court documents, on 30 April 2014, the General Court of Abha found proof of Fayadh having committed apostasy (ridda) and also his repentance for it. The court therefore ruled to lift the penalty for apostasy, however, it sentenced him to four years in prison and 800 lashes – to be administered 50 at a time every 10 days – for storing images on his mobile telephone, and the confiscation of his telephone.

On 17 November 2015, the General Court of Abha sentenced Fayadh to death for the crime of being an infidel (kufr) following a re-trial. The court argued that Fayadh’s repentance for the crime of apostasy was a matter of the heart and should have no bearing determining whether or not the crime had been committed. Fayadh appealed the sentence.

On 2 February 2016, a Saudi Arabian court replaced the death sentence with an eight-year prison term and 800 lashes. Fayadh has further appealed against this fresh conviction.

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International Women’s Day 2016 – Women Writers on the Frontline of Freedom of Expression