Sowetan

Defence pointed to flaws in the case

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Tunis – A Frenchman and a Tunisian woman were convicted on Wednesday on appeal in Tunis for “public indecency” after an altercatio­n with police who arrested the couple while they were hugging in a car.

The couple, who maintain that they were not kissing, were given a lighter sentence than the original term handed out at their October 4 trial, after widespread outrage on social media and in the press over the incident.

The man was handed four months in prison for “public indecency” and “refusing to obey the police”, with the woman given a two-month sentence on the first charge only. “It’s an independen­t decision,” a spokesman for the public prosecutor’s office, Sofiene Sliti, said.

“What has been reported nationally and internatio­nally is wrong – they weren’t arrested for a kiss, the couple was naked,” he added.

At the hearing, the woman collapsed into tears when the court president read a police descriptio­n saying a sexual act was in process when the couple were stopped on October 1 in a suburb of Tunis.

The woman said her friend had simply taken her into his arms when the police stopped them and made them get out of the car. The Frenchman confirmed to the judge that he had tried to film the police to make a complaint about their behaviour.

A dozen defence lawyers had been arguing for an acquittal for the couple. The majority of the lawyers were working for free on the case, which has triggered an uproar in Tunisia over morality campaigns and police behaviour.

The defence pointed to numerous flaws in the case, including hearings in Arabic which the Frenchman, who is of Algerian origin, did not understand.

“It is normal that he reacts badly when his fundamenta­l rights were being violated,” said lawyer Ghazi Mrabet, whose client is accused of intimidati­ng police.

He pointed to what he said was “bad faith” on the part of the police, who he said were looking for revenge. – AFP

‘‘ People didn’t want to go to ‘the place where you will die’

was published in September 2016.

The Ebola treatment centres set up by Doctors Without Borders and other aid groups, exemplary in their medical and hygiene standards, were initially the object of deep suspicion among local people.

At the beginning of the crisis, conspiracy theories about the origins of Ebola were rife, and people distrusted and even attacked some health workers.

Also, the high mortality rate did not help.

“People didn’t want to go to ‘the place where you will die’,” said Anders Nordström, ambassador for global health at Sweden’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs, who was head of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) in Sierra Leone in 2014-2015.

To encourage people to seek treatment, the WHO filmed patients with smartphone­s, and showed the videos to villagers to reassure them.

 ??  ?? Nassim Ouadi
Nassim Ouadi

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