Life sentence for Muslim murderer of film-maker

A DUTCH court sentenced the confessed killer of Dutch film-maker Theo Van Gogh to life imprisonment today.

It is the harshest sentence possible for a murder that stunned the country, heightened ethnic tensions and raised concerns about homegrown Islamic terrorism.

Mohammed Bouyeri, 27, had mounted no defence at his two-day trial in Amsterdam earlier this month for the murder on November 2 of Van Gogh - whom he accused of insulting Islam - and told the court he would do it again if given the chance.

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Bouyeri has two weeks if he wants to lodge an appeal, but that appeared unlikely.

He was convicted of the murder, described in the judgement as a terrorist attack, the attempted murder of bystanders and police officers, illegal possession of firearms and impeding the work of a member of parliament, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, whom he had threatened to kill in a letter impaled in Van Gogh's chest.

The judgement said Bouyeri had shown "a complete disregard for human life."

Bouyeri ambushed the film-maker on an Amsterdam street, shot him repeatedly, stabbed him and slit his throat before thrusting his manifesto into his chest on the point of a knife.

Some witnesses said he was so calm "it looked like he was out walking his dog," the judge said, describing the murder and the subsequent shoot-out with police. In his earlier court appearance, Bouyeri said he had acted in the name of Islam and felt no pain for Van Gogh's family.

Van Gogh, a distant relative of the famous painter, was a social critic and columnist who attacked the treatment of women in fundamentalist Islamic households in a short film, Submission, which offended many Muslims.

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