Sounds like there are some rays of hope in Tunisia, as well as need for further reforms as more than 1,600 prisoners of conscience were released from prison recently, while others remain incarcerated.
The US Government, Amnesty International, and Tunisian Monitoring Group of the International Freedom of Expression Exchange (IFEX) welcomed the release of the imprisoned human rights activists, journalists and bloggers, while also calling for the release of internet writer, lawyer and human rights activist Mohammed Abbou and other prisoners of conscience. The full text of the IFEX appeal is appended below:
1 March 2006
On the first anniversary of the jailing of Tunisian internet writer, lawyer and human rights activist Mohammed Abbou, international freedom of expression groups welcomed the recent release of many Tunisian prisoners of opinion including journalist, Hamadi Jebali, imprisoned for more than 15 years, and the youth of Zarzis, whose release was the focus of an international campaign, but expressed dismay at the continued incarceration of Abbou and the escalation of other free speech violations.
Abbou was jailed on 1 March 2005 and subsequently prosecuted at an unfair trial, on a highly questionable charge of “assault”, for publishing information that “would disturb public order” and for “insulting the judiciary”. His is just one of a series of cases of free speech rights abuse documented by International Freedom of Expression Exchange (IFEX) member groups, including 14 members of the IFEX Tunisia Monitoring Group.
Freedom of assembly is severely restricted. Political parties, human rights groups and civil society activists have been physically prevented by police from holding peaceful gatherings on private premises. Meetings of the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women (ATFD) and the Democratic Forum for Labour and Freedom (FDLT), National Council Freedoms (CNLT) in Tunisia and meetings of the Tunisian Human Rights League (LTDH) have all been banned.
Controls on phones, faxes and the internet are still in place three months on from the World Summit for the Information Society (WSIS) in November 2005. The security services summoned several human rights defenders in February, including members of the editorial board of the banned newspaper Kalima, searched them and confiscated copies of the newspaper in their possession.
Tunisian authorities have blocked publication of the weeklies al Maoukif, published by the opposition Democratic Progressive party, and Akhbar al Joumhouria. Foreign papers have faced bans on distribution including the French Paris daily Le Monde and the magazine al Maraa al Youm published in Dubai.
Despite the repeal of the dépôt legal system which required copies of Tunisian periodicals to be sent to officials, the system still applies to the foreign press. It allows the authorities to silence media that criticise the government or raise taboo subjects.
We urge the Tunisian government:
· To free Mohammed Abbou and all remaining prisoners of opinion.
· To stop the censorship of publications in Tunisia, and use of the dépôt legal system to stop the distribution of foreign media.
· To lift the legal requirement that new periodicals must be officially registered prior to publication.
· To allow independent broadcasters to establish.
· To allow freedom of assembly for all independent NGOs and parties
· To end the harrassment and intimidation of human rights defenders-ends-
More information:
For further information, contact Steve Buckley, AMARC, tel: +44 114 2201426, e-mail: sbuckley@gn.apc.org; or Alexis Krikorian, IPA, tel: +41 79 214 55 30, e-mail: krikorian@ipa-uie.org, Internet: http://campaigns.ifex.org/tmg