Hamza Kashgari, “was taken into custody as he arrived in Riyadh on Sunday night,” reported the English-language daily Arab News, citing “informed sources.”
“The sources said Kashgari was accompanied by Saudi officials on his flight to King Khaled International Airport in Riyadh,” Arab News reported.
He “will face charges of blasphemy,” the sources told the daily.
Kashgari was detained in Malaysia last week after fleeing Saudi Arabia in fear of his life after his Twitter post about the Prophet (PBUH) sparked outrage.
Kashgari, 23, was a columnist at the Jeddah-based Al-Bilad newspaper, which announced firing him following the controversy over his tweets.
Insulting the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) is considered blasphemous in Islam and is a crime punishable by execution in deeply conservative Saudi Arabia.
“Kashgari is in the hands of Saudi authorities. Thank you our King Abdullah,” Tweeted Abdulazeez al-Sahn as soon as news of the journalist’s arrest emerged.
Human rights groups had warned that deporting Kashgari would be akin to a death sentence and urged Muslim-majority Malaysia to free him.
A group on the online social network Facebook calling itself “The Saudi people demand Hamza Kashgari’s execution” had amassed more than 21,000 members by Monday.
Kashgari quickly repented tweeting: “I have made a mistake, and I hope God and all those whom I have offended would forgive me.”
The controversial tweet sparked a frenzy of responses, some 30,000 according to an online service that tracks tweets in the Arab world.
In one Tweet, Abdullah, a lawyer, said that since Kashgari was “an adult... we should accept nothing but implementing the ruling according to Islamic (sharia) law.”
Another Tweeter Saleh al-Ghamdi was not so harsh. “Brothers, the man has repented. If the Prophet (PBUH) himself was here he would have forgiven him and ended this,” he wrote.
A committee of top clerics branded Kashgari an “infidel” and demanded he be tried in an Islamic court.
Malaysia has no formal extradition treaty with Saudi Arabia and Kashgari’s deportation has been condemned by rights groups.
Responding to claims that Interpol was involved in Kashgari’s deportation, the international police body issued a statement Monday repeating its denial of any involvement in the case.
“No Interpol channels, its national central bureaus in Kuala Lumpur and Riyadh nor its general secretariat headquarters in Lyon, France, were involved at any time in this case,” the police body said.
Interpol first issued a denial last week of any involvement, saying the arrest of Kashgari took place on a bilateral basis between Malaysia and Saudi Arabia.
But it said Monday it was repeating its statement because numerous news outlets had either stated or implied that it was involved.
The incident has shone a spotlight on the use of freewheeling social media networks such as Twitter and Facebook in deeply conservative Saudi Arabia.
Top Saudi cleric Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah al-Sheikh has called Twitter “a great danger not suitable for Muslims” and “a platform for spreading lies and making accusations.”
FROM..http://www.arabtimesonline.com/NewsDetails/tabid/96/smid/414/ArticleID/179614/reftab/96/t/Saudi-journalist-faces-blasphemy/Default.aspx
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