Sadeq Mallallah
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Born in 1970, Sadeq Abdul Kareem Malallah (صادق مال الله) was a Saudi Arabian convicted, and executed for apostasy in 1993.
The Washington Post reported the execution, in an article by Carlyle Murphy on October 1 1993.[1] It reported that he had been executed in Qateef on September 3 of that year, after having been convicted of throwing stones at a police car in 1988 and imprisoned for five years in Mababeth prison. During his imprisonment, he faced further charges that he had "insulted God, the holy Quran and Muhammad the prophet."
He is alleged to have said that Muhammad was "a liar and swindler" and that the prophet had practised witchcraft and consorted with demons.[2]
Before his execution, he had appealed to two appeal courts, which upheld his conviction, as did King Fahd.
Because a Qatif judge alleged that he had smuggled a Bible into the country, his case is often misrepresented in the blogosphere as having been "executed for owning a Bible".[3][4][5]
[edit] External link
- ^ http://thespiritofislam.com/books/imk/index.html
- ^ http://thespiritofislam.com/books/imk/index.html
- ^ http://clivedavis.blogs.com/clive/2005/05/a_lesson_in_tol.html
- ^ http://cripescorner.blogspot.com/2005_05_01_cripescorner_archive.html
- ^ http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110006712