Egyptian Writer Acquitted of Violating Public Morals

Monday, 04 January 2016 05:33 AM EST ET

CAIRO (AP) — A Cairo court has acquitted an Egyptian writer who had faced a possible jail sentence for publishing sexually explicit material that allegedly violated public morals.

Mahmoud Othman, a lawyer representing author Ahmed Naji, says the writer and Tarek el-Taher, the editor-in-chief of Egypt's top literary magazine, were acquitted Saturday.

Naji would have faced up to two years in jail and a fine of up to 10,000 Egyptian pounds ($1,245) if found guilty of violating a law against publishing material deemed contrary to public morals.

The prosecution took up the case after an individual filed a lawsuit saying he was harmed by reading an excerpt of Naji's novel, "The Use of Life," which was published in Akhbar al-Adab magazine in August 2014.

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MiddleEast
A Cairo court has acquitted an Egyptian writer who had faced a possible jail sentence for publishing sexually explicit material that allegedly violated public morals.Mahmoud Othman, a lawyer representing author Ahmed Naji, says the writer and Tarek el-Taher, the...
ML,Egypt
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2016-33-04
Monday, 04 January 2016 05:33 AM
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