(RSF/IFEX) – Reporters Without Borders has condemned the 14-month prison sentence imposed in absentia on journalist Mohamed Fourati on 9 March 2007 by an appeal court in Gafsa (400 km south of Tunis) for two articles he wrote in 2002. One, published on the Aqlma online news website, was said to prove he belonged to […]
(RSF/IFEX) – Reporters Without Borders has condemned the 14-month prison sentence imposed in absentia on journalist Mohamed Fourati on 9 March 2007 by an appeal court in Gafsa (400 km south of Tunis) for two articles he wrote in 2002. One, published on the Aqlma online news website, was said to prove he belonged to an opposition group. The other was about fundraising for the family of a political prisoner.
“The way the authorities and prosecutors have gone after Fourati shows their determination to silence dissident journalists and writers,” the press freedom organisation said. “The Tunisian government does not permit any opposition, whether in the traditional press or on the Internet. Cyber-dissident Mohammed Abbou, who has been imprisoned since March 2005 for criticising the president online, is a case in point.”
Fourati was accused in 2002 of having ties to a group that helped the families of political prisoners after he wrote an article about fundraising for the family of detainee Abdelhamid Louhichi for Aqlma online, a website specialising in the Maghreb. Gafsa appeal court judges dismissed the charges twice but determined prosecutors appealed against their rulings and managed to have Fourati retried and convicted by a different appeal court on 9 March.
Fourati currently lives in Qatar, where he works for the daily “Al-Sharq”. He did not return to Tunisia for the trial and will not have to serve the sentence unless he returns to the country. The Tunisian authorities are refusing to let his wife leave the country to join him in Qatar.
Fourati was formerly the Tunis correspondent for the London-based Quds Press International news agency and helped edit “Al-Mawqif”, the newspaper of the Progressive Democratic Party. He is also a member of a local press freedom watchdog and of the Union of Tunisian Journalists (SJT), neither of which is recognised by the government.
Abbou has been imprisoned since March 2005 for an article published in August 2004 on the Tunisnews website, in which he compared the torture of political prisoners in Tunisia with the mistreatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq by US soldiers (see IFEX alerts of 5 March 2007, 8 December, 8 May, 26 and 21 April, 15, 6 and 2 March and 28 February 2006, and others).