Algerian court sentences Hirak activist to 10 years jail for ‘inciting atheism’
An Algerian court on Thursday handed a key member of the Hirak anti-government protest movement a 10-year prison sentence for "inciting atheism", a rights group said.
Yacine Mebarki was also found guilty of "offending Islam" and fined 10 million dinars ($77,400), Said Salhi, vice president of the Algerian Human Rights League said.
Salhi said he was "shocked by such a heavy verdict against a citizen who only expressed his opinion online".
The sentence was the longest given to a member of the Hirak, the popular anti-government movement that led demonstrations which ousted former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika from power last year.
Read also: Algeria's Hirak protest movement is gearing up for a comeback
At the start of the trial, the prosecution demanded Mebarki be jailed for eight years.
But in a rare move the judge at the Khenchela court in eastern Algeria decided to add two more years to that term.
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Mebarki denied any wrongdoing and will appeal, Salhi said.
The 52-year-old activist had been arrested on September 30 during a raid at his home.
According to a friend, the police found an old and faded copy of the Koran with one of its pages ripped -- something considered as an attack against Islam.
Salhi said Mebarki had been convicted of inciting atheism and "offending Islam" as well as inciting discrimination and hatred.
"It's a case of freedom of conscience and opinion," Salhi said, calling for Mebarki's release and for charges against him to be dropped.
The Hirak-led protests broke out in February last year and led to the resignation of Bouteflika, whose plans to run for a fifth term had sparked the protests.
Weekly demonstrations continued after Bouteflika's ouster to demand wholesale political changes but halted in March this year due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Meanwhile authorities have cracked down on activists, journalists and government critics, with many jailed and convicted on various charges.
A total of 61 people are currently behind bars for acts related to "Hirak", according to CNLD, a rights group that lists prisoners of conscience in Algeria.
In a bid to mollify the protest movement, Algeria on Wednesday launched a campaign for constitutional reforms which will be put to a referendum in November.
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