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Three charged for fire attack on UK publisher: police
(AP)

3 October 2008
LONDON - Three men have been charged with plotting to attack the publisher of a novel about the Prophet Muhammad and his child bride, British police said late Thursday.

Phone salesman Abrar Mizra, 22, cab driver Abbas Taj, 30, and Ali Beheshti, an unemployed 40-year-old, are charged with plotting to endanger life and damage property at the north London home and office of Martin Rynja, the publisher of Sherry Jones' “The Jewel of Medina," police said. Beheshti was also charged with possessing a weapon “designed or adapted for the discharge of a noxious liquid or gas." All three are due to appear in court Friday.

Sherry Jones' debut novel is a work of historical fiction about Aisha, who according to tradition was 9 when she became the wife of the Prophet Muhammad. Rynja's publishing house, Gibson Square, acquired the rights to the book after its original publisher, Random House, dropped plans to put it out.

Random House said it had received credible information that the book could incite violence from a small group of radicalized Muslims.

Mizra, Taj, and Beheshti were arrested Saturday by armed police near Rynja's home office in the London borough of Islington. A fire broke out at the building around the time of the arrests, although police have refused to divulge any further details about the incident. Rynja has since dropped out of sight.

Rynja originally planned to come out with the book in October, but the a report in The Bookseller quoted Alan Jessop of Compass, the publisher's sales representative, as saying publication was “in suspended animation" while Rynja sought advice on how to proceed. On Thursday the book's U.S. publisher, Beaufort Books, announced it had moved up the release date from Oct. 15 to Monday.

“By speeding up the publication, we wanted to reduce or eliminate the chance of violence," Eric Kampmann, president of Beaufort Books, said. “What had occurred in London, we didn't want to have occur here. We wanted people to have a chance to read the book. Once they read the book, we thought the violence part of this story would disappear and people would be focusing on the story, and the book and Sherry."

Kampmann said he knew of no threats in the United States.   

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