Malaysian authorities on Friday said they had detained a young Saudi journalist who fled his country after Twitter comments he made about the Prophet Mohammed triggered calls for his execution.
Hamza Kashgari was taken into custody after flying into Malaysia’s main international airport on Thursday, national police spokesperson Ramli Yoosuf told AFP.
“Kashgari was detained at the airport upon arrival following a request made to us by Interpol after the Saudi authorities applied for it,” he said.
Officials in Interpol’s office in Malaysia could not immediately be reached for comment.
The state news agency Bernama said 23-year-old Kashgari had been detained by Muslim-majority Malaysia “for allegedly insulting Islam and the Prophet Mohammed”.
Last week, on the prophet’s birthday, he tweeted: “I have loved things about you and I have hated things about you and there is a lot I don’t understand about you.
“I will not pray for you.”
Extradition
AFP could not immediately confirm where Kashgari flew in from or whether he was en route to another destination.
A statement released by Malaysian Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Kashgari was detained in the airport’s departure hall but gave no further details.
“The police are now in contact with the Saudi Arabian authorities in order to determine the next steps,” the statement said.
Malaysia and Saudi Arabia do not have a formal extradition treaty but have close ties as fellow Muslim countries.
A Malaysian home ministry official who asked to remain unidentified said Kashgari could be extradited under other bilateral security agreements. Malaysia has in the past summarily deported people it considers undesirable.
Rights organisation Amnesty International called for Kashgari’s immediate and unconditional release, saying he faced possible execution if he was returned to Saudi Arabia and his comments were ruled to amount to apostasy.
Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa deputy director, said it considered Kashgari “a prisoner of conscience since he is being detained in Malaysia for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression”.
‘Abhorrent’
Kashgari’s controversial tweet sparked some 30 000 responses, according to an online service that tracks Twitter postings in the Arab world.
Insulting the prophet is considered blasphemous in Islam and is a crime punishable by death in Saudi Arabia.
Fadiah Nadwa Fikri, a spokesperson for Malaysian activist group Lawyers for Liberty, said Kashgari was a blogger who had decried the “oppression of women”.
“This is again a violation of freedom of expression. He has every right of making comments and so on without being persecuted,” she told AFP.
“Malaysia should give asylum to him. But instead they are conspiring with the Saudi government. It’s abhorrent.”
Kashgari has apologised over the affair but that has not stemmed calls for his head.
A committee of top clerics branded him “an “infidel” and demanded he be tried in an Islamic court, while a Facebook page entitled “The Saudi people demand Hamza Kashgari’s execution” has attracted thousands of followers.

The incident has shone a spotlight on the use of freewheeling social media networks such as Twitter and Facebook in deeply conservative Saudi Arabia.

Top Saudi cleric Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah al-Sheikh has called Twitter “a great danger not suitable for Muslims” and “a platform for spreading lies and making accusations”.
But millions of Saudis, including many government officials, have created Twitter and Facebook accounts.