ATP - A Palestinian poet and leading
member of Saudi Arabia’s nascent contemporary art scene has been sentenced to
death for renouncing Islam.
A Saudi court on Tuesday
ordered the execution of Ashraf Fayadh, who has curated art shows in Jeddah and
at the Venice Biennale. The poet, who said he did not have legal
representation, was given 30 days to appeal against the ruling.
Fayadh, 35, a key member of the
British-Saudi art organisation Edge of Arabia, was originally sentenced to
four years in prison and 800 lashes by the general court in Abha, a city in the
south-west of the ultraconservative kingdom, in May 2014.
But after his appeal was
dismissed he was retried last month and a new panel of judges ruled that his
repentance did not prevent his execution.
“I was really shocked but it
was expected, though I didn’t do anything that deserves death,” Fayadh told the
Guardian.
Ashraf Fayadh on YouTube.
Photograph: YouTube
Mona Kareem, a migrant rights
activist from Kuwait who has led a campaign for the poet’s release, said: “For
one and a half years they promised him an appeal and kept intimidating him that
there’s new evidence.
“He was unable to assign a
lawyer because his ID was confiscated when he was arrested [in January 2014].
Then they said you must have a retrial and we’ll change the prosecutor and the
judges. The new judge didn’t even talk to him, he just made the verdict.”
Fayadh’s supporters believe he
is being punished by hardliners for posting a video online showing the
religious police (mutaween) in Abha lashing a man in public. “Some
Saudis think this was revenge by the morality police,” said Kareem.
Kareem also believes that
Fayadh has been targeted because he is a Palestinian refugee, although he was
born in Saudi Arabia. Bidoon – or stateless – people
suffer discrimination and persecution in the Gulf, she said.
The religious police first
detained Fayadh in August 2013 after receiving a complaint that he was cursing
against Allah and the prophet Muhammad, insulting Saudi Arabia and distributing
a book of his poems that promoted atheism. Fayadh said the complaint
arose from a personal dispute with another artist during a discussion about
contemporary art in a cafe in Abha.
He was released on bail after
one day but the police arrested him again on 1 January 2014, confiscating his
ID and detaining him at a police station until he was transferred to the local
prison 27 days later. According to Fayadh’s friends, when the police failed to
prove that his poetry was atheist propaganda, they began berating him for
smoking and having long hair.
“They accused me [of] atheism
and spreading some destructive thoughts into society,” said Fayadh. He added
that the book, Instructions Within, published in 2008, was “just about me being
[a] Palestinian refugee … about cultural and philosophical issues. But the
religious extremists explained it as destructive ideas against God.”
The case went to trial in
February 2014 when the complainant and two members of the religious police told
the court that Fayadh had publicly blasphemed, promoted atheism to young people
and conducted illicit relationships with women and stored some of their
photographs on his mobile phone.
Fayadh denied the accusations
of blasphemy and told the court he was a faithful Muslim. According to the
court documents, he said: “I am repentant to God most high and am innocent of
what appeared in my book mentioned in this case.”
The documents also state that
he admitted that he had relationships with the women. But Fayadh said his words
had been twisted: the women were fellow artists and the photos on his phone,
some of which he posted on Instagram, were taken during Jeddah art week, Saudi
Arabia’s most important contemporary art event.
An image from Ashraf
Fayadh’s Instagram account.
The case highlights the
tensions between hardline religious conservatives and the small but growing
number of artists and activists who are tentatively pushing the boundaries of
freedom of speech in Saudi Arabia, where cinema is banned and there are no art
schools. Abha, which has become a hub for contemporary Saudi art, has been
a focal point for these disputes in recent years. An anonymous collective of
film-makers who set up a secret cinema in the city in October 2012received
death threats from hardliners.
The kingdom’s best known
contemporary artist, Ahmed Mater, who lives in Abha and testified in Fayadh’s
defence at his first trial, said: “Ashraf is well known in Abha and the whole
of Saudi Arabia. We are all praying for his release.”
Stephen Stapleton, co-founder
of Edge of Arabia, said Fayadh had been a key figure taking Saudi contemporary
art to a global audience.
“He was instrumental to
introducing Saudi contemporary art to Britain and connecting Tate Modern to the
emerging scene,” said Stapleton. “He curated a major show in Jeddah in 2013 and
co-curated a show at the Venice Biennale later that year.
“I’ve known him since 2003.
He’s a truly wonderful, kind person. He’s an intellectual and creative but he’s
not an atheist.”
Adam Coogle, a Middle East
researcher for Human Rights Watch, said Fayadh’s death sentence showed Saudi
Arabia’s “complete intolerance of anyone who may not share government-mandated
religious, political and social views”.
“The trial records in this case
indicate clear due process violations, including charges that do not resemble
recognisable crimes and lack of access to legal assistance,” he said.
“This case is yet another black
mark on Saudi Arabia’s dismal human rights record in 2015, which includes the
public flogging of liberal blogger Raif Badawi in January and a death
sentence for Ali al-Nimr, a Saudi man accused of protest-related
activities allegedly committed before he was 18 years old.
“If Saudi Arabia wishes to
improve its human rights record it must release Fayadh and overhaul its justice
system to prevent all prosecutions solely for peaceful speech – especially
those that result in beheading.”
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