Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Shoe-thrower asks for leniency


Comandante

Status: Offline
Posts: 14952
Date:
RE: Shoe-thrower asks for leniency
Permalink   
 


In related news:

CAIRO (Reuters) - An Egyptian man said on Wednesday he was offering his 20-year-old daughter in marriage to Iraqi journalist Muntazer al-Zaidi, who threw his shoes at U.S. President George W. Bush in Baghdad on Sunday,



The daughter, Amal Saad Gumaa, said she agreed with the idea. "This is something that would honor me. I would like to live in Iraq, especially if I were attached to this hero," she told Reuters by telephone.



Her father, Saad Gumaa, said he had called Dergham, Zaidi's brother, to tell him of the offer. "I find nothing more valuable than my daughter to offer to him, and I am prepared to provide her with everything needed for marriage," he added.



__________________
Not everything I post or say on foro are necesarily true facts.  <- THAT is a fact! :blankstare:


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1490
Date:
Permalink   
 

Palestinian journalists protest Thursday in support of shoe-throwing Muntadhar al-Zaidi.


A government spokesman confirmed Thursday that Muntadhar al-Zaidi penned a contrite handwritten letter to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki requesting compassionate treatment.

Yaseen al-Majeed, the prime minister's media adviser and spokesman, read CNN part of the letter, saying al-Zaidi describes what he did as "the great ugly act I perpetrated" and says an excuse would not be enough for that.

Al-Zaidi said he recalled interviewing al-Maliki in 2005, and al-Maliki had said to him "come in, this is your home, too."

Al-Majeed told CNN al-Zaidi asked al-Maliki for that same "fatherly compassion." The letter was received on Thursday but it was written at another time, al-Majeed said.

Asked if al-Maliki would consider exonerating him, al-Majeed said it is too early to talk about that because the case remains with the judicial authorities.

Al-Zaidi is hailed as a hero by many Iraqis protesting his detention after he threw both of his shoes at Bush while the U.S. president and al-Maliki were holding a news conference Sunday during Bush's unannounced visit to Baghdad. VideoWatch Muntadhar al-Zaidi throw his shoes at Bush »

Neither shoe hit Bush, and the journalist was knocked to the ground, hustled out of the room and arrested by security officials.


As he was pushed to the floor, the reporter shouted out that his shoe-throwing -- a traditional insult in Arab culture -- was a "farewell kiss" to a "dog" who launched the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

His actions drew attention from around the globe and adulation in the Arab world.

Al-Zaidi's brother told CNN on Wednesday that the case against his brother will be tried next week, and an Iraqi Central Criminal Court source said the correspondent most likely will be charged with assaulting a foreign head of state.

A spokesman for the Higher Judicial Council, Judge Abdul Sattar al-Beeraqdar, did not give a date for the trial but said it would not be long after procedures are completed.


Al-Zaidi met Tuesday evening with an investigative judge who referred the case to trial, the criminal court source said.

Al-Zaidi's employer, Egypt-based Al-Baghdadia TV, confirmed the meeting took place at the reporter's holding cell in Baghdad's International Zone, according to network spokesman Abdul Hamid al-Saeh.



__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard