New York, May 6, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is concerned about official harassment and threats against Sudanese editor
Mohamed Taha Mohamed Ahmed.
Ahmed is being tried this month on criminal charges of insulting the Prophet
Mohammed after publishing an April 21 article in the daily Al-Wifaq.
The article, by the well-known Muslim historian Al-Maqrizi, called into
question the Prophet Mohammed's lineage, according to a local source and
press reports. Ahmed, himself an Islamist, claims he published the historian's
account in order to rebut it, according to the BBC and a CPJ source.
Newspapers and religious leaders attacked Ahmed following the publication
of the article. The National Press Council, Sudan's official press regulator,
imposed a three-day suspension on the paper, and the state prosecutor
brought charges against Ahmed.
The exact charges against Ahmed are unclear, although press reports said
that Ahmed could face the death penalty if he is found guilty of apostasy.
Press reports said that mobs of angry people called for Ahmed's death
on Wednesday and clashed with police outside the courtroom.

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