Forwarded Alert: Tunisia – Obstructions to an independent judiciary hamper human rights, says TMG

Forwarded Alert: Tunisia – Obstructions to an independent judiciary hamper human rights, says TMG
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Forwarded from: IFEX
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08 June 2010

Forwarded Alert: Tunisia – Obstructions to an independent judiciary hamper human rights, says TMG

Tunisia needs a truly independent judiciary to reverse its worsening record on human rights and treatment of prisoners of opinion. This is a key conclusion of the Tunisia Monitoring Group (TMG), a coalition of 20 free expression groups, following a recent mission.

The groups were gathered in Beirut on 6 June 2010 to launch their latest report: Behind the Façade: How a Politicised Judiciary & Administrative Sanctions Undermine Tunisian Human Rights. The launch came as part of the Arab Free Press Forum hosted by the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA), a TMG member.

“The report reveals how the legal system in Tunisia can be abused and manipulated by the authorities to silence critical opinion,” said Rohan Jayasekera of Index on Censorship, current chair of the TMG. “Only a truly independent legal system – from courthouse lawyers to supreme court judges – can protect constitutionally guaranteed human rights.”

It draws from research and interviews during the TMG’s seventh mission to Tunisia, conducted between 25 April and 6 May 2010. The TMG found that there had been a significant deterioration of human rights in Tunisia since the last TMG mission in 2007.

The report records a number of recurring cases of harassment, surveillance, and imprisonment of journalists and human rights activists some of whom have been detained in harsh conditions, physically harassed and dismissed from their jobs. Others have been denied their rights to communicate and move freely. The report culminates with 18 specific recommendations for change.

A potpourri of administrative sanctions used to limit free expression and exert indirect pressure on journalists and human rights defenders are also addressed. These include denying licences to independent and opposition media, the harassment of critical journalists and human rights defenders and the confiscation of publications.

Another chapter analyses the tactics the Tunisian authorities have employed in an effort to prevent the emergence of an independent judiciary, in spite of its national and international obligations.

“At a time when the Tunisian government is seeking “advanced status” with the EU, TMG members urge the government to take serious steps to adhere to international standards of basic human rights, as guaranteed by the Tunisian Constitution as well as by the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,” says Amadou Kanoute of ARTICLE 19, the team leader for the TMG mission.

The TMG is a coalition of 20 members of the International Freedom of Expression eXchange (IFEX) network which has been monitoring violations in Tunisia since 2004. Members of the recent mission included experts from ARTICLE 19, Index on Censorship, International Press Institute, Norwegian PEN and the Writers in Prison Committee of International PEN.

 
Read the full report:
TMGREPORT2010PDF

Source: www.ifex.org

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Forwarded by IHRC solely for informational purposes, please contact source website for more information

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“And what reason have you that you should not fight in the way of Allah and of the weak among the men and the women and the children, (of) those who say: Our Lord! Cause us to go forth from this town, whose people are oppressors, and give us from Thee a guardian and give us from Thee a helper.”
Holy Qur’an: Chapter 4, Verse 75

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