Published on 3 April 2006
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Reporters Without Borders welcomed the release on 3 April 2006 of jurist Kamal Sayid Qadir, an Austrian national of Kurdish origin, arrested on 26 October 2005 for posting “defamatory” articles about the authorities in Kurdistan.
The cyberdissident had been sentenced to 18 months in prison just a few days earlier. At a first hearing, he was sentenced to 30 years in prison on the basis of the same charge.
Welcoming his release, the press freedom organisation said, “We met the Iraqi ambassador in Paris last week and Kamal Sayid Qadir’s case was raised. We asked for the urgent release of the cyberdissident, stressing our concern about the constant adjournments of his case.”
Reporters Without Borders also sent an open letter to the UN in Iraq and the Austrian president urging them to interene on his behalf.
Qadir had been charged with posting articles on a Kurdish website implicating the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, Massud Barzani, in a corruption case. He was also accused of insulting and defaming the head of state.
"This release show the determinaton of the government to suport democracy in this region,” said a local spokesman, Mohammed Khoshna.
Qadir had been on remand in Erbil prison since 26 October 2005, in the autonomous region of Kurdistan in the north of Iraq. He was sentenced on 19 December 2005, for “defamation of public institutions”. In a statement posted on the site kurdishmedia.com, the jurist accepted that he had made "inappropriate" comments about certain people referred to in his articles.
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At least 77 journalists and media assistants have been kidnapped in Iraq since March 2003. Twenty-three of them have been murdered, 40 have been released and 13 are still being held by their abductors.