HAMZA KASHGARI HINA ISLAM DAN NABI MUHAMMAD S.A.W DITANGKAP DI KLIA
HAMZA KASHGARI HINA ISLAM DAN NABI MUHAMMAD S.A.W DITANGKAP DI KLIA
Hamza hina Rasulullah ditangkap
KUALA LUMPUR – Seorang penulis Arab yang dikehendaki pihak berkuasa Arab Saudi kerana didakwa menghina Islam dan Nabi Muhammad SAW akan dihantar pulang ke negara itu selepas proses dokumentasi terhadapnya selesai.
Mohammad Najeeb A. Kashgari atau lebih dikenali sebagai Hamza Kashgari, 23, ditahan pada pukul 9.40 pagi di balai berlepas Lapangan Terbang Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur (KLIA) di Sepang kelmarin ketika dia mahu meninggalkan Malaysia.
Sebelum ditahan, dia yang merupakan kolumnis akhbar Al-Bilad di Arab Saudi dipercayai telah berada di negara ini sejak dua hingga tiga hari lalu selepas melarikan diri dari negaranya.
“Hamza ditahan polis negara ini atas permintaan pihak berkuasa Arab Saudi kerana didakwa menghina Islam dan Nabi Muhammad SAW pada sambutan Hari Maulidur Rasul baru-baru ini,” kata satu sumber di sini semalam.
Menteri Dalam Negeri Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein mengesahkan penangkapan kolumnis akhbar Arab Saudi, Mohammad Najeeb A.Kashgari, di Balai Berlepas Lapangan Terbang Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur (KLIA) pada Khamis.
Hishammuddin berkata warga Arab itu yang lebih dikenali sebagai Hamza Kashgari, 23, ditahan polis pada pukul 9.40 pagi atas permintaan pihak berkuasa Arab Saudi kerana dilaporkan menghina Islam dan Nabi Muhammad SAW.
“Pihak Polis Diraja Malaysia (PDRM) telah berhubung dengan pihak berkuasa Arab Saudi untuk menentukan tindakan lanjut,” katanya dalam kenyataan pada Jumaat.
Semalam, Bernama memetik satu sumber Interpol yang memberitahu bahawa lelaki itu ditahan polis sejurus tiba di KLIA setelah melarikan diri dari negara itu.
Kolumnis berkenaan dilaporkan telah mengeluarkan satu laporan yang menghina Islam melalui twitternya, yang menyebabkan kemarahan rakyat Arab Saudi.
Menurut laporan media Arab Saudi, Hamza mengeluarkan laporan itu pada hari sambutan Maulidur Rasul minggu lepas dengan membayangkan seolah-olah dirinya berinteraksi dengan Nabi Muhammad SAW dan seolah-olah kedua-dua mereka adalah sama taraf.
Hamza turut menyatakan ada sifat Nabi Muhammad SAW yang disukai dan tidak disukainya.
Media negara itu melaporkan susulan laporan Hamza, sebanyak 30,000 entri twitter yang marah dengan laporannya dibuat dalam tempoh kurang 24 jam. -BERNAMA
Ekoran dari penularan tweet tersebut, rakyat Arab Saudi mahu Hamza dihukum pancung malah ada pihak yang menawarkan ganjaran 10,000 riyal (anggaran RM8,076.20) untuk membunuh Hamza. Ulama terkenal, Sheikh Nasser Al Omar menangis teresak² sambil merayu Raja dan Putera Mahkota agar menangkap dan menjatuhkan hukuman mati terhadap pemuda tersebut.
VIDEO SHEIKH NASSER AL OMAR MERAYU RAJA AGAR
MENJATUHKAN HUKUMAN MATI KE ATAS HAMZA KASHGARI
Hamza Kashgari jelas 'menggali liang kuburnya' sendiri pada saat dia berkelakuan seperti musuh Islam. Tweet telah dipadam, maaf sudah dilafaz tetapi itu tidak memadai untuk membersihkan cercaan yang dilemparkan pada idola umat Islam, Nabi Muhammad S.A.W. Mungkin mati pun belum cukup untuk 'mencuci' dosa Hamza Kashgari. Penulis bersetuju Hamza dibicarakan lalu dihukum mengikut cara Islam.
Malaysia Detains Saudi Over Twitter Posts on Prophet
By LIZ GOOCH and J. DAVID GOODMAN
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Authorities here said they will likely repatriate a Saudi Arabian writer who fled Saudi Arabia amid calls for him to be executed after he posted Twitter messages considered insulting to the Prophet Muhammad, Malaysian authorities said Friday.
Malaysian police detained the writer, Hamza Kashgari, a 23-year-old columnist for the Jeddah-based Al Bilad newspaper, when he arrived at Kuala Lumpur International Airport on Thursday, Hishammuddin Hussein, the Malaysian Minister of Home Affairs, said in a statement.
“The police have contacted their counterpart in Saudi Arabia to determine the next course of action,” Mr. Hussein said.
Rights groups have expressed concern about Mr. Kashgari’s safety after religious conservatives in Saudi Arabia called for him to be arrested and executed after he directly addressed the Prophet Muhammad in a series of posts on Twitter. Amnesty International called for Malaysia not to deport Mr. Kashgari, to immediately disclose where he is being held and to grant him access to a lawyer.
“We are calling on the Malaysian government to stop any deportation proceedings they may have started,” said Cilina Nasser, a London-based researcher with Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa program. The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the death threats made against Mr. Kashgari, who issued an apology before fleeing his home country.
Mr. Kashgari’s tweets incited outrage in the conservative Islamic country, where many regarded them as blasphemous, and reportedly prompted the king to call for his arrest. Blasphemy is a crime punishable by death in Saudi Arabia.
More than 13,000 people have joined a Facebook page titled “The Saudi People Demand the Execution of Hamza Kashgari.”
According to The Daily Beast, a friend of Mr. Kashgari, who asked not to be named, accompanied him to the airport and witnessed his detention.
“We were just watching him, waiting for him to pass the immigration checkpoint. Once he submitted his passport, they asked him to step away for a few minutes,” The Daily Beast quoted the friend as saying. “And suddenly these two people without uniforms just arrested him.”
An official from Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who refused to be identified, said Mr. Kashgari would likely be repatriated to Saudi Arabia.
Mr. Kashgari would be sent back “because he is on the watch list of Saudi Arabia,” the official said.
Some reports have suggested that Mr. Kashgari wanted to seek asylum abroad. But the foreign affairs official said Malaysia does not grant asylum out of respect for the laws of other countries. “It’s not our practice to grant political asylum,” the official said, adding that the ministry had contacted the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Kuala Lumpur.
The official said Malaysia, a Muslim-majority country, had good diplomatic relations with Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi Arabian Embassy here did not respond to efforts to seek comment on Friday.
In one Twitter post, which has since been deleted but was published by Agence France-Presse, Mr. Kashgari wrote to the Prophet: “I have loved things about you and I have hated things about you and there is a lot I don’t understand about you. I will not pray for you.”
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