Reporters Without Borders today condemned obvious harassment of prominent journalist and writer Mohammed Abdel Qader al-Jassem and called for it to stop. The worldwide press freedom organization also called for his immediate release and for all charges to be dropped. Al-Jassem has been interrogated by the district prosecutor at the National Security ministry since the morning of 11 May. According to local media, the prime minister, Sheikh Nasser Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, is behind this latest summons. The journalist has two lawyers with him but his family has not managed to have any contact with him. “It is a political trial”, said the journalist who began a hunger strike in protest. “The prosecutor called him yesterday morning to tell him that an arrest warrant had been issued against him and inviting him to attend at the department of National Security…unless he wanted to be arrested at his home”, his daughter, Sumayah al-Jassim, told Reporters Without Borders. “So he went. It was 1pm when the interrogation started yesterday. It went on until 3 am and then started against this morning. We do not know how much longer it will go on.” She said that the lawyers had told her that they were going through every article that her father had posted on his blog in the past five years and on a book published in 2006. “But there is a law in our country that says it is illegal to take action against any work, more than 90 days after it is published. My father has said he is going to lay a complaint against Sheikh Nasser Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah for bringing a case illegally” “With this new summons and this interrogation on his writing going back to 2006, it is obvious that Mohammed Abdel Qader al-Jassem is being hounded by the authorities. It has got to stop. We call for the immediate release of the journalist and that all charges still pending against him be dropped,” the worldwide press freedom organization said. Al-Jassem was sentenced on 1st April to six months in prison for “slander” against the prime minister. He had called at public meetings for his resignation, saying he was incapable of running the country. The court however suspended the sentence pending an appeal, fixing bail at 5,000 dinars (about 13,000 euros). The journalist, who paid bail, said he would appeal the sentence.“ He added that he had indirectly received a letter from the director of National Security telling him to leave the country. The journalist refused to comply and condemned the order on his blog. “I am waiting to receive a summons for this case too”, he concluded ironically. Reporters Without Borders underlined that the Kuwaiti prime minister was received by President Nicolas Sarkozy, on 16 April 2010. RSF