Arabia |
Kuwait Renews Detention of Cleric |
2005-04-01 |
![]() He was arrested on March 12 and remanded in custody for 21 days pending investigations. He has denied both charges saying his speeches were only an expression of his opinion and never meant to be used by the militants. Local reports said that the militants used his anti-US sermons as a justification for fighting against Kuwaiti security forces. Last August, the cleric was questioned by the public prosecutor on charges that he had called for jihad against US forces in Iraq. He was freed without bail. In June, he was handed a two-year suspended jail sentence for publicly opposing Kuwait's support for the US-led war on Iraq in March 2003 which toppled President Saddam Hussein. The government blocked the cleric's website last month as part of a crackdown on activities viewed as linked to terror. |
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Arabia |
13 'terrorists' detention extended |
2005-03-25 |
![]() Meanwhile, attorney Mubarak Al-Mutawa, defending Sheikh Hamid Al-Ali, former preacher of the Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs and former Secretary-General of the Salafi Movement, Wednesday told the Arab Times the detention of Sheikh Hamid should be finalized by the end of next Wednesday before completion of 21 days - the official detention period. Al-Mutawa also said lawyers for Sheikh Hamid are neither allowed to meet their client nor attend the interrogations. He added the Public Prosecution is holding the interrogations in secret in the belief they could be jeopardized if they are made public. "At the moment we are trying to prove there is no link between what Sheikh Hamid has said or posted on his Internet website and what the terrorists have done in Kuwait," said Al-Mutawa. He added the two cases should be treated separately because there is no link between Sheikh Hamid and terrorists. Al-Mutawa said Sheikh Hamid does not know the suspects of the Maidan Hawalli and Umm Al-Haiman shoot-outs and has no relation with them. He added the suspects in the two incidents are youths who have misunderstood and misinterpreted what Sheikh Hamid had said. He added Sheikh Hamid is not responsible for what other people think or do. Hamid was summoned and interrogated by the Public Prosecution for allegedly collaborating with the suspects of the Maidan Hawalli and Umm Al-Haiman shoot-outs. |
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Arabia |
Moves to free Sheikh Hamid |
2005-03-16 |
![]() Al-Mutawa also told the Prosecutor-General the case against his client is a human rights issue. He added what Sheikh Hamid had said could have been misunderstood by some youths who behaved irresponsibly and Sheikh Hamed cannot be held responsible for their behaviour. Al-Mutawa asked Al-Othman not to ask for a 21 days detention for Sheikh Hamid because he is ready to appear before the prosecution whenever summoned. He added the case against Hamid is relevant to human rights and "we do not want someone to say that human rights are violated in the State of Kuwait," said the lawyer. Al-Mutawa added some lawyers had volunteered to defend Sheikh Hamid and the defence team had agreed to meet later to coordinate their efforts. Two MPs, Dr Waleed Al-Tabtabaei and Abdullah Akash, also visited the Prosecutor-General for the same reason. However, they discussed the matter with Al-Othman from a national point of view since they are members of Parliament and Sheikh Hamid is a well-known personality whose detention could cause frustration among his followers. |
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