Drug trafficking: Egyptian gets 5 years
2013-01-15 14:14
Jeddah - A Saudi court on Tuesday sentenced an Egyptian
rights lawyer whose arrest on drug trafficking charges in April sparked a
diplomatic row with Cairo to five years in prison and 300 lashes.
Ahmed al-Gizawi, arrested in April, was accused of trying to
smuggle 21 380 capsules of the anti-anxiety drug Xanax, which is banned in
Saudi Arabia where drug trafficking carries the death sentence.
Another Egyptian, arrested over the same case, was sentenced
to four years in prison and 400 lashes, while their Saudi partner was jailed
for two years and will receive 100 lashes.
"These verdicts are lenient" given the defendants'
"good morals ... and the lack of judicial precedents," the judge said
at the hearing. The verdicts can be appealed within one month.
The prosecution, which alleged that Gizawi had hidden the
banned substance in two milk cartons and a cover for the Koran, had demanded
the death penalty for the lawyer.
Gizawi had travelled in April to Saudi Arabia with his wife
to perform the omra, the minor pilgrimage to Islam's holiest sites in Mecca and
Medina, when he was detained at Jeddah airport, the Arabic Network for Human
Rights Information said at the time.
The Egyptian organisation said that Gizawi was held after he
was sentenced in absentia to one year in prison and 20 lashes for criticising
the Saudi government.
Gizawi was being targeted for his activism over Egyptian
detainees in Saudi prisons, it said.
Hundreds of Egyptian protesters had rallied outside Riyadh's
embassy in Cairo demanding his release, prompting the kingdom to shut down its
mission.
The embassy reopened on 4 May following a fence-mending
visit to King Abdullah by a large delegation of prominent Egyptian figures.