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British 'teddy bear' teacher leaves Sudan after presidential pardon

Posted : Tue, 04 Dec 2007 04:01:05 GMT
By : DPA
Category : UK (World)
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London - A British school teacher jailed in Sudan for naming a teddy bear Mohammed was released and expected back in Britain Tuesday morning, ending a controversy hailed in Britain as a victory for "common sense."Gillian Gibbons, 54, was handed over to the British embassy in Khartoum Monday following a pardon from Sudanese President Omar al- Bashir, after serving just over a week of a 15-day jail term for "insulting religion."

She boarded a flight later in the evening and was expected to arrive in London Tuesday morning, British news agency PA reported.

Gibbons declined to comment to reporters on the flight, but in a statement issued before her release Monday she said "sorry" for her actions, adding that she had not meant to offend anyone.

"I have great respect for the Islamic religion and would not knowingly offend anyone and I am sorry if I caused any distress," she said.

The incident had strained relations between Britain and Sudan and, beyond that, between the West and Islam, commentators in London said.

Within a short time of her release being announced, up to 40 people demonstrated outside the British embassy in Khartoum, criticizing the decision.

In Dundee, Scotland, British police were Monday investigating an incident in which the words "teddy bear" were scratched on three cars owned by Asian families.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, while saying that he was "delighted and relieved" at the news, also said the arrest and conviction of Gibbons was "completely unacceptable" and had caused "outrage around the world."

Speaking in Gibbons' home town of Liverpool, her son John thanked the government for "all the work behind the scenes."

Gibbons was arrested in Khartoum on November 25 and sentenced to 15 days in jail last Thursday for "insulting religion" after allowing pupils at a fee-paying Christian charity school to name a toy bear Mohammed - after one of them.

She had already spent several days in pretrial detention.

In her statement, she said she was "very sorry" that she would no longer be able to teach her class of 6-and 7-year-olds at Unity High School.

It emerged during her one-day trial Thursday that another member of staff reported Gibbons to the Ministry of Education over the teddy bear naming, which happened in September.

The news of her release came after a weekend of intense lobbying by Baroness Sayeeda Warsi and Lord Nazir Ahmed, both Muslim members of the House of Lords (Upper House of Parliament) in Britain.

After extending their unofficial visit to Khartoum, they were granted a meeting with al-Bashir Monday.

Warsi said the incident over the teddy bear had led to an "unfortunate, unintentional, innocent misunderstanding."

But she also said that attitudes in Khartoum had "hardened" during the talks, and that hard-liners were demanding a retrial for the teacher.

Ahmed said: "As British Muslims, we are proud to have secured the release of Gillian Gibbons."

It was a point taken up by Foreign Secretary David Miliband, who, while expressing his gratitude to the mediators, said their intervention had shown that "UK opinion spans all religions."

In Britain, the mainstream Muslim organizations backed the government stance that Gibbons had made an "innocent mistake" and demanded her freedom.

But in Khartoum several hundred angry demonstrators, some wielding knives and sticks, criticized the "leniency" of the verdict last Friday, while some asked for her to be "killed."

A spokesman for the Sudanese embassy in London, Khalid al-Mubarak, who had earlier described the furore over the teddy as "a storm in a teacup," reacted with relief to the news.

"Congratulations. I am overjoyed," he said. "She is a teacher who went to teach our children English and she has helped a great deal and I am very grateful.

The head of the Anglican Church, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, said the release of Gibbons would be "welcome news to all in Britain and elsewhere, Muslims included."

John Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, welcomed the release which he said should lead to people "to love the stranger in their community better."

The outspoken church leader, who is from Uganda, said he hoped the same degree of media attention would now be given to the suffering of people in the Darfur region of Sudan.

Copyright DPA

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