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Tunisia: Post-election assault on journalists signals 'no let-up in repression'
The assault of two independent journalists in Tunisia and the arrest of a third in the wake of last week’s elections must be punished, Amnesty International said today.
Amnesty International Middle East and North Africa Director Malcolm Smart said:
“It appears that these three journalists were targeted because they have criticised the government and opposed the re-election, for a fifth term, of President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali.
“This is an extremely worrying development, indicating that there is likely to be no let-up in the Tunisian government’s repression of dissent.”
On Wednesday, Slim Boukhdhir, an independent journalist who has previously been jailed for writing articles critical of the government, was stopped in the street in Tunis and forced into a car by five men in plain clothes, all believed to be police or security officials. They forced him to close his eyes, beat and insulted him as they drove away, then stopped the car, threw him out and kicked and punched him until he lost consciousness. One of the assailants brandished a knife and threatened to stab him.
He was stripped of his clothes, had his mobile phone, identity documents, money and house keys taken - apparently to give the impression that he was the victim of an ordinary criminal mugging - and was dumped in Belvédère Park in north Tunis. A passer-by helped him to get a taxi and a friend then took him to hospital where he learnt that he had sustained a broken nose and damage to his left eye, in addition to multiple bruising to his face and chest pain. Two hours before his abduction and assault, Slim Boukhdhir had given an interview to the BBC in which he criticised a lack of press freedom in Tunisia.
On Thursday, another journalist and well-known government critic, Taoufik Ben Brik, was arrested after he went to a police station in response to a summons he’d received in connection with an alleged assault on a woman near his daughter’s school on 22 October. He appeared before an investigating judge in the absence of his lawyers and was charged with “assault, breaching pubic morality and damage to property”, according to an official statement. He is currently detained in Mornaguia Prison and is due to stand trial on 19 November. Before the election, he wrote several articles criticising President Ben Ali’s government.
Also on Thursday, Lotfi Hajji, a local correspondent for the Al Jazeera satellite TV channel, was subjected to a sustained verbal assault when he arrived at Tunis Carthage Airport after returning on a flight from Qatar. His unknown assailant - thought to have been a member of the security forces or someone acting on their behalf - shouted and insulted him in a highly intimidating manner, accusing him of opposing the government. In his Al Jazeera reporting, Lotfi Hajji, has criticised aspects of the recent presidential and legislative elections.
The apparent targeting of these journalists, all known critics of the Ben Ali’s government, reflects a wider and long-standing pattern in which critics of the government and human rights activists are routinely subjected to oppressive police surveillance, threats and intimidation by security officials or people in plain clothes believed to be acting on their behalf.
Malcolm Smart added:
“It is high time that the Tunisian government put its house in order and lived up to its obligations under international human rights law.
“The government portrays itself internationally as one committed to human rights and good governance but this, sadly, is far from the truth. In practice, the government is intolerant of criticism and allows its security forces and strong-arm men to assault and intimidate critics with impunity.”