Cairo, Egypt.

Story highlights

Writer in Egypt gets two year prison sentence for writing "sexually explicit" material

A man complained of getting heart palpitations after reading excerpts of his novel in a magazine

Writers and artists worry about a trend of prosecuting intellectuals

CNN  — 

An Egyptian author has been sentenced to two years in prison for writing “sexually explicit” scenes that were published in a magazine. Novelist Ahmed Naji was found guilty Saturday of violating public modesty for the writings from his novel “Using Life.”

A man had complained that Naji’s writings caused him heart palpitations, sickness and a drop in blood pressure. Prosecutors took the case to court, arguing that Naji’s use of “vulgar” phrases to describe genitals and sexual intercourse constituted a “disease destroying social values.”

“Citizens can’t bring such cases to court without proving a direct and personal link to the action in question,” Mahmoud Othman, one of Naji’s lawyers, told CNN. Instead, prosecutors have been framing their cases as an offense to public morality, he said.

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Nasser Amin, another lawyer for Naji, described Saturday’s verdict as shocking, especially since a lower court had acquitted the writer in December.

“It’s expected that a lower court would issue a guilty verdict in such cases which would be overturned by a higher court, not the other way around,” Amin told CNN.

Rights groups said it is part of a worrying trend of prosecuting intellectuals and artists in Egypt.

“The continuation of such policies would increase fears that people of different viewpoints and fiction [writers] would be thrown in prison for the mere expression of these opinions in any format,” a number of Egyptian rights organizations said in a joint statement following Naji’s sentence.”

Naji was arrested on the spot Saturday and transferred to prison. His lawyers filed a request to suspend the sentence until they file the last appeal.

Tarek El-Taher, the editor of the state-run magazine that published the excerpt of Naji’s novel last year, was fined $1,250.

Other artists and writers prosecuted

Saturday’s verdict is the fourth against an Egyptian writer or artist in the recent months.

Film producer Rana El-Sobky was sentenced to a year in prison for “violating public modesty” in a film released in theaters.

Poet Fatma Naoot was sentenced to three years in prison for contempt of religion for a post she wrote on Facebook. Both have appealed their sentences.

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