Qatar Poet Serving 15-Year Jail Term Pardoned
A Qatari poet, Rashid al-Ajami, has been pardoned and released after serving more than three years of a 15-year prison sentence for insulting the emir, a family member said Wednesday.
"Yes it's true and we have nothing to say but 'Thank God,'" the family member of Ajami, jailed for insulting the emir and trying to overthrow the regime, told AFP, asking not to be named.
It was the first such confirmation of his release inside Qatar where officials have refused to comment, despite his pardon by the emir being widely reported outside the tiny Gulf emirate.
A friend of Ajami's also told AFP that he was now free and had returned to his family home.
His release apparently came after the intervention of a senior member of his family.
The poet, also known as Ibn Al-Deeb, had been serving his sentence since being imprisoned for life in November 2012.
This was reduced on appeal several months later to 15 years.
He was convicted after reciting a poem in August 2010 while with a group of friends in Cairo, where he was a student at the time.
Ajami was apparently challenged to read a poem that was indirectly critical of then Qatari ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani.
He was recorded and the video was then uploaded on to YouTube.
Ajami was subsequently arrested by Qatari authorities in November 2011, although his lawyers argued there was no evidence to support the charges.
Ajami's case, which garnered international condemnation over limits to free speech in Qatar, had again threatened to embarrass the 2022 World Cup football host, with demonstrations planned outside Qatari embassies in London and Washington.
Rumors of his release began circulating in Qatar on social media on Tuesday night.
It is not known if his pardon by Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani came attached with conditions.
Outside Qatar, however, Ajami's release was welcomed by Amnesty International, which called it "long overdue".
"It is absurd that he had to spend more than four years behind bars, when his poetry was simply the peaceful expression of his conscientiously held beliefs," said Amnesty's James Lynch.
"We hope that the authorities will take the opportunity of this release to review Qatar’s criminal justice system and ensure that such flagrant violations of the right to freedom of expression are not repeated."
*Photo credit: Al-Jazeera