CAIRO – A Cairo court Saturday ordered the government
to block access to the video-sharing website YouTube for 30 days for
carrying an anti-Islam film that caused deadly riots across the world,
but the ruling can be appealed and based on precedent may not be
enforced.
Judge Hassouna Tawfiq ordered YouTube blocked for carrying the film, which he described as "offensive to Islam and the Prophet (pbuh)." He made the ruling in the Egyptian capital where the first protests against the film erupted last September before spreading to more than 20 countries, killing more than 50 people.
Egypt’s new constitution includes a ban on insulting "religious messengers and prophets."
Broadly worded, blasphemy laws also were in effect under former president Hosni Mubarak prior to his ouster in a popular revolt two years ago.
YouTube’s parent company, Google, declined requests to remove the video from the website last year, but restricted access to it in certain countries, including Egypt, Libya and Indonesia, because it says the video broke laws in those countries.
At the height of the protests in September, YouTube was ordered blocked in several countries.
Lawyer Mohammed Hamid Salim, who filed the lawsuit in Cairo, alleged the film constitutes a threat to Egypt’s security, adding that YouTube refused to remove the film despite its offensive content. Protesters in Cairo scaled the US Embassy’s walls and brought down the US flag in the first demonstration against the film last year. – AP
Judge Hassouna Tawfiq ordered YouTube blocked for carrying the film, which he described as "offensive to Islam and the Prophet (pbuh)." He made the ruling in the Egyptian capital where the first protests against the film erupted last September before spreading to more than 20 countries, killing more than 50 people.
Egypt’s new constitution includes a ban on insulting "religious messengers and prophets."
Broadly worded, blasphemy laws also were in effect under former president Hosni Mubarak prior to his ouster in a popular revolt two years ago.
YouTube’s parent company, Google, declined requests to remove the video from the website last year, but restricted access to it in certain countries, including Egypt, Libya and Indonesia, because it says the video broke laws in those countries.
At the height of the protests in September, YouTube was ordered blocked in several countries.
Lawyer Mohammed Hamid Salim, who filed the lawsuit in Cairo, alleged the film constitutes a threat to Egypt’s security, adding that YouTube refused to remove the film despite its offensive content. Protesters in Cairo scaled the US Embassy’s walls and brought down the US flag in the first demonstration against the film last year. – AP
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