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Britain's 'lyrical terrorist' wins court appeal
A British woman who called herself the 'lyrical terrorist' and wrote a poem about beheading a hostage, won an appeal against a criminal conviction in London on Tuesday. Samina Malik, 23, had been convicted last year of possessing documents useful to terrorists and was given a nine month suspended sentence.

A former employee at a newspaper kiosk at Heathrow airport, she had written poetry which prosecutors said advocated violent extremism, and also downloaded Islamist literature from the Internet. One of her poems, 'How to behead', was read out in court during her trial. It contained a description in detail of how to slice off a hostage's head.

Her conviction spurred controversy, with human rights groups arguing she had been convicted of a 'thought crime' without having actually done anything dangerous.

The Court of Appeal threw out her conviction on Tuesday under a ruling from February that concluded documents need to actually be helpful to a terrorist, rather than merely encouraging terrorism, for possession to count as a crime.

The Crown Prosecution Service said it would not seek a retrial after Malik's successful appeal. 'Since Ms Malik's conviction, the law has been clarified by the Court of Appeal. The result is that some of the 21 documents we relied on in Ms Malik's trial would no longer be held capable of giving practical assistance to terrorists,' CPS head Sue Hemming said in a statement.
Posted by: Fred 2008-06-18
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=241994