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This undated picture released by the office of attorney May Khansa shows Ali Sibat posing for a photograph with his wife at an unknown location in Saudi Arabia. Khansa urged Lebanese and Saudi leaders to help spare her client's life. Image Credit: AP

Al Ain, Lebanon: Lebanese psychic Ali Sibat had just woken from an afternoon nap in a Saudi hotel when the telephone rang. A Saudi man asked if he could make magical talisman for his sister who had marital problems. Sibat, in the kingdom on a pilgrimage, said he'd be happy to help.

As soon as he hung up, religious police stormed into his room and arrested him for witchcraft. Now Sibat is on death row, sentenced to be beheaded.

His arrest in 2008 and sentencing the following year has devastated Sibat's family in the eastern Lebanese village of Al Ain, who have been struggling to win his release. Last week, they were hit by the news that his execution was scheduled for that Friday, April 2.

His 19-year-old son went into a seizure from the shock and remains in a hospital. His 15-year-old daughter was thrown into depression and could not go to school. In the end, the execution did not take place, but the family remains in fear.

"It was a shock to all of us," Sibat's wife, Samira Rahmoun, 46, said. "We're all dying a slow death."

Saudi Arabia arrests dozens of people a year on sorcery charges, and the last known execution came in 2007 with the beheading of an Egyptian pharmacist, according to human rights groups. The charges are often vague — covering anything from fortunetelling to astrology to making charms and talismans believed to bring love, health or pregnancy. Saudi judges cite verses forbidding witchcraft, but such practices remain popular as a folk tradition.

In Sibat's case, the charges seem to centre around a call-in talk show he hosted on a Lebanese station where he would tell fortunes.

His supporters point out that the show was aired from Lebanon, not Saudi Arabia. The Sibat family's lawyer in Lebanon, May Khansa, contends the call to Sibat's hotel room appears to have been a set-up by Saudi religious police to incriminate him.

"Islam prohibits tricking people," Khansa said.

Sibat, 49, a devout Shiite and father of four, was a 20-year-old tailor when he proposed to Rahmoun, a Sunni from his home village Al Ain. She said he became interested in astrology from the age of 15 and read many books on the subject.

He later worked as a truck driver until five years ago, when the Lebanese satellite channel Sheherezade hired him to do psychic readings three times a week. In the show The Hidden, he would take in calls from viewers with problems and offer spiritual solutions, as telephone numbers scrolled across the screen for viewers to call in from Australia, France, Switzerland, Italy, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria.

"There is a tree at the entrance to your house," he told a female caller in an episode from 2007. "Dig 30 centimetres deep at the base of the tree and you'll will find something. Pick it up and throw it in the water. Everything in your household will be fine from then on."

To another caller from Tunisia, whose daughter was ill, he said: "Your daughter has been sick ever since she was born. Bathe her — her body must be clean and abluted — and then read the Sura [Quranic verse] of Al Momenoon once." The caller says she doesn't know how to read. Anyone else will do, he responds, then lists three other Suras that must be read over the daughter before her health improves.

Rahmoun seems unconvinced about her husband's powers, but insists he did nothing wrong. "I was OK with his new job. He didn't hurt anyone."

She stressed that he was a good Muslim, beginning his programme by reading an Islamic verse that denies the powers of fortune tellers and emphasises that "no one knows the unknown but God".

Without his income, the family has been left near destitute, borrowing some $10,000 (Dh36,700) to make ends meet, she said. Her older son's fiancee called off the engagement because of Sibat's imprisonment. Sibat's five-year-old daughter Jamal, often cries asking for her father.

Do you think the media coverage has been fair in this incident? If the case drags on, how do you see it impacting Saudi-Lebanese relations?