Jailed Qatari poet to appeal life sentence
Accused of calling for the overthrow of the Qatari government, Muhammad al-Ajami to appeal his life sentence.
A Qatari poet who has been sentenced to life in prison for insulting the emir of Qatar and calling for the overthrow of the government has been granted an appeal, according to his lawyer.
Mohamed Rachid al-Ajami, 36, was jailed in November 2011 after a judge found him guilty of spreading incendiary material against the government of the Gulf state.
Ajami’s lawyer, Dr Najeeb al-Nuaimi, told Al Jazeera on Sunday that his client’s case would be brought before of the Court of Appeal on January 27 and that both the prosecution and the defence will present oral arguments.
However, Nuaimi said that his special request that Ajami be released on bail was rejected by the court, without motivation.
“Still, I put all my confidence on the appeals court as they are actually independent. We were very angry but now I’m calm as I am confident that we will get a fair review of the case,” Nuaimi, who is Qatar’s former justice minister, told Al Jazeera.
Neither the Court of First Instance nor the Qatari Justice Ministry could be reached for comment.
Maximum sentence
After his arrest in 2011, Ajami was charged for encouraging the overthrow of the government of Qatar, accusing the emir of misusing the county’s constitution and for criticising the country’s crown prince.
Ajami was accused of writing and spreading a poem about the Tunisian uprising in which he allegedly wrote: “…we are all Tunisians in the face of repressive elites”.
Qatar’s Court of First Instance sentenced Ajami to life in prison on November 29, 2011, handing down the maximum sentence allowed for attempting to overthrow the government.
“The first instance court was very aggressive toward my client and they did not give me access to the court,” Nuaimi said on Sunday.
“To my great surprise, the initial investigative judge fulfilled two roles in this case as he also became the chairman of the court that sentenced my client to life in prison. This is illegal under Qatari law.”
Nuaimi said he would take the case to Qatar’s Supreme Court if the Court of Appeal upholds Ajami’s life sentence.
“If that also doesn’t work we will take this case to an international court, either in The Hague or in Belgium or the US. There are plenty of institutions that would hear our case,” Nuaimi said.
“But I don’t think it will come to that. I have to be positive.”