17 September 2004
Alert
CPJ protests imprisonment of opposition weekly's editor
Incident details
Abdel Karim al-Khaiwani
(CPJ/IFEX) - In a 16 September 2004 letter to President Ali Abdullah Saleh, CPJ protested the imprisonment of Abdel Karim al-Khaiwani, editor of the opposition weekly "Al-Shoura", who began serving a one-year prison sentence on 5 September.
On 5 September, al-Khaiwani was convicted of incitement, insulting the president, publishing false news and causing tribal and sectarian discrimination. Al-Khaiwani's lawyer, Jamal al-Jaabi, told CPJ that al-Khaiwani was charged under both Yemen's Press Law and Penal Code. The court also suspended "Al-Shoura" for six months.
Al-Jaabi said the charges against al-Khaiwani stemmed from nine opinion pieces published in the 7 July issue of the weekly, which was dedicated to discussing the Yemeni government's fight against rebel cleric Hussein Badreddin al-Hawthi, who led a three-month uprising against authorities in the northern Yemeni region of Saada. Hundreds were reportedly killed during the uprising, and government forces killed al-Hawthi on 10 September.
The articles, which were written by other newspaper staff members, were extremely critical of the government's conduct and questioned its motives in engaging in an armed conflict against al-Hawthi and his supporters. For example, one of the pieces claimed that the government was creating terrorism with its actions, while another claimed that innocent people were being killed in the conflict.
Al-Jaabi said that al-Khaiwani was detained at "Al-Shoura"'s offices late in the evening on 5 September, the same day the court convicted him. Al-Jaabi said that the officers who arrested al-Khaiwani were dressed in plainclothes and did not provide a warrant when they came for him. Al-Jaabi told CPJ that he has already filed an appeal.