Muhammad Maree is still on a hunger strike in Bourg el-Arab Prison. He’s been moved to Section 15, while his fellow hunger striker Sinai blogger Moss’ad Abu Fagr has been moved to Section 19. Both are locked up with “criminals.”
Tag: bloggers
Blog-blocking court hearing adjourned
Sarah Carr reports…
The Supreme Administrative Court on Monday adjourned hearing the appeal of a case brought by judge Abdel Fattah Murad seeking the blocking of 51 websites.
Lawyer Rawda Ahmad from the Arab Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) — whose website is included on the list of 51 — told Daily News Egypt that the case was adjourned pending the court’s receipt and examination of a specialist report.
Ahmad said that the court is scheduled to announce the date of the next hearing Tuesday.
Murad, the head of the Alexandria Appeals Court, initiated the case against the list of 51 human rights organizations and bloggers last year. He accused the websites of “tarnishing Egypt’s reputation,” and demanded that they be blocked.
Earlier in 2007, ANHRI director Gamal Eid brought a case against Murad accusing him of plagiarizing more than 50 pages of an ANHRI report on the internet in the Arab world.
“Dr Abdel Fattah Murad, judge and head of Alexandria Appeal Court, recently published a book entitled ‘Scientific and Legal Principles of Blogs,’ which includes more than 50 pages copied from HRinfo’s [now known as ANHRI] report entitled ‘Implacable Adversaries: Arab Governments and the Internet,’ without reference to sources, as dictated by Intellectual Property Protection Act no. 82/2002,” HRInfo stated in a press release issued last year.
Murad’s case against the 51 websites was thrown out by the Administrative Court at the end of December 2007.
Blogger arrests hit record high
From the BBC:
More bloggers than ever face arrest for exposing human rights abuses or criticising governments, says a report.
Since 2003, 64 people have been arrested for publishing their views on a blog, says the University of Washington annual report.
In 2007 three times as many people were arrested for blogging about political issues than in 2006, it revealed.
More than half of all the arrests since 2003 have been made in China, Egypt and Iran, said the report.