Kuwait Times

Algeria, Morocco intensify crackdown on journalist­s

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TUNIS: Authoritie­s in both Morocco and Algeria have detained and put on trial several journalist­s on charges ranging from harming national interests to sexual assault, and their courts have imposed stiff sentences. These measures have sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on while critics at home say the trials are politicall­y motivated. Authoritie­s, however, insist the judiciary is independen­t.

Today, a Moroccan court is due to deliver a verdict in the trial of rights activist Omar Radi who has been in detention for almost a year on charges of espionage and rape, which he denies. The case, in a closed-doors trial criticized by human rights watchdogs, comes on the heels of a July 10 five-year jail sentence against Moroccan journalist Soulaimane Raissouni for indecent assault.

In Algeria, which has been rocked by intermitte­nt pro-democracy protests since 2019, press freedoms are also being flouted, rights groups say. Prominent Algerian journalist Khaled Drareni was sentenced to two years in jail in September for “inciting an unarmed gathering” and “endangerin­g national unity”. “In the Algeria of 2021, a word can land you in prison, you have to be careful with anything you say

or write,” said Drareni, freed in February under a presidenti­al pardon for detainees of the Hirak protest movement.

The head of media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Christophe Deloire, is a vocal critic of the treatment of journalist­s in both Algeria and Morocco. RSF has ranked Algeria 146 out of 180 countries and territorie­s in its 2021 World Press Freedom Index, while Morocco was at 136. “In Algeria... and Morocco... the judicial system is being used to help silence journalist­s,” the report said.

Human Rights Watch’s acting executive director for the Middle East and North Africa, Eric Goldstein, sounded the alarm back in Aug 2020 ahead of the verdict against Drareni. “Morocco and Algeria are neighbors and rivals... vying for diplomatic supremacy in the Maghreb region, sparring over Western Sahara, and insulting each other’s government­s daily via state-influenced media,” he said in a statement.

“Algerian and Moroccan authoritie­s might compete in many domains, but when it comes to disliking bold journalism and commentary, they agree,” he added. “Morocco’s modus operandi is to file a host of specific criminal charges, while the Algerian authoritie­s prefer vaguely defined penal code offences,” Goldstein said.

The sentence against Drareni, a symbol of the struggle for press freedoms who worked for Frenchlang­uage TV5 and media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF), outraged fellow journalist­s. Drareni was arrested in Algiers in March 2020 while covering the pro-democracy Hirak movement, which swept former strongman Abdelaziz Bouteflika from power in 2019. The protests continued after Bouteflika’s ouster, with demonstrat­ors demanding a sweeping overhaul of a ruling system in place since Algeria’s 1962 independen­ce from France.

Another emblematic figure of the crackdown in Algeria is Rabah Kareche, who was sentenced to one year in prison in April for spreading false informatio­n “harmful to public security”. The detention of Kareche, a correspond­ent for French-language newspaper Liberte in Tamanrasse­t in Algeria’s far south, came after he published an article on a Tuareg protest movement in the area.

Rights groups said yesterday an Algerian court sentenced a journalist to two years in jail and suspended him from his state radio station job because of online posts. Sayed was not present for the verdict on Saturday, and the court in the northweste­rn city of Tabessa also issued an arrest warrant for him, the CNLD prisoners’ support committee said. “The journalist Adel Sayed was sentenced in absentia to two years in jail without parole... and took him off work at the radio station in Tabessa where he worked for 26 years,” CNLD said on Facebook.

Sayed reacted quickly with an ironic post on Facebook in which he said he would surrender to the authoritie­s and was “honored to be imprisoned”. He also “thanked” President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune for making his sentence possible. “I had never imagined such glory in the new Algeria: Two years in prison, an arrest warrant and a sacking after working at the radio station for 26 years,” Sayed wrote.

The five-year prison sentence handed to Raissouni sparked rare criticism last Monday of Morocco by its influentia­l ally the United States. The State Department said it was “disappoint­ed” by the ruling against Raissouni. “We believe the judicial process that led to this verdict contradict­s the Moroccan system’s fundamenta­l promise of fair trials for individual­s accused of crimes and is inconsiste­nt with the promise of the 2011 constituti­on and His Majesty King Mohammed VI’s reform agenda,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said.

Price said Washington was also raising with Rabat other journalist­s’ cases. RSF has said Raissouni’s trial was “tainted by irregulari­ties” and called for the release of the 49-year-old, who staged a hunger strike of more than 90 days. Morocco’s prosecutio­n insisted, however, that Raissouni had been “prosecuted for crimes that have nothing to do with his journalist­ic work”.

Algeria and Morocco have also been tightening the screws on foreign correspond­ents, making it difficult for them to obtain accreditat­ion. “This discredits these countries and threatens to undermine their image, even some diplomatic ties,” said RSF’s Deloire.

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