If you're planning on taking up a hobby as an internet troll, Saudi Arabia is probably somewhere to avoid.
A
30 year-old Saudi national was apparently sentenced to 50 lashes for
insulting members of his own tribe on the Twitter microblogging site.
According
to the Riyadh Bureau website a group of tribesmen from a village near
the city of Medina - Islam's 2nd holiest site - lodged a complaint
against the man at a local police station, providing screenshots as
proof.
They asked the police to ban him from "harming" and insulting them, and to punish him for the offending tweets.
In
his defense, the "suspect" said he had not meant to offend anyone from
his village, and was simply responding to a columnist on Twitter.
But
in spite of his protestations the man was found guilty and sentenced to
lashes for breaking the "Anti e-Crimes Act" by committing a “criminal
act that damages the bonds of cohesion and disturbs tribal peace,”
according to the Arabic-language Al Watan newspaper.
He was also ordered to sign a pledge not to repeat the "offense."
Social
media is viewed with deep suspicion throughout much of the Arab world
as it is notoriously difficult to sensor, allowing dissidents and
political opposition groups to communicate more freely and sometimes in
anonymity.
There are an estimated 4 million active users of Twitter in Saudi Arabia alone.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for your comment