Ex-cricketer Khalid Latif sentenced to 12 years for threatening Dutch far-right leader

Ex-cricketer Khalid Latif sentenced to 12 years for threatening Dutch far-right leader

Pakistan

Trial was held absentia

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – A Dutch court sentenced a former Pakistani cricketer to 12 years in prison on Monday after he was tried in absentia for urging people to murder Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders.

The court ruled that the statement by 37-year-old Khalid Latif – who lives in Pakistan and has not attended any stage of the trial or been detained in the Netherlands – should be regarded as incitement to murder, sedition and threat.

Read more: Khalid Latif, former Pakistani cricketer, on trial in Dutch MP threat case

Prosecutors said Latif posted a video in 2018, offering a reward for the murder of Wilders. That video came after Wilders said he planned to hold a contest depicting caricatures of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). The competition was later cancelled.

Images of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) are forbidden in Islam as a form of idolatry. Caricatures are regarded by most Muslims as highly offensive.

Reuters was not immediately able to reach Latif – who received a five-year ban from cricket in 2017 over a spot-fixing scandal – for comment. Latif, 37, captained the Pakistan team in the 2010 Asian Games.