The Citizen (KZN)

Countries ‘silencing dissidents’

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Paris – Government­s around the world are “reaching beyond their borders” to attack their own citizens abroad in order to crush dissent, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said yesterday, urging more protection for them.

The New York-based rights group said so-called “transnatio­nal repression” was having a “chilling effect” on political criticism and called on countries and internatio­nal organisati­ons to take action.

“Methods... include killings, abductions, unlawful removals, abuse of consular services, the targeting and collective punishment of relatives and digital attacks,” an HRW report said.

Some government­s have abused the Interpol alert system to “illegitima­tely target a national living abroad”.

The report details 75 cases of government­s in more than two dozen countries – including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Belarus and Cambodia – carrying out “human rights abuses... to silence or deter dissent” over the past 15 years.

“Government­s should dedicate resources to understand how transnatio­nal repression occurs on their soil and take needed steps to better protect those who initially came looking for safety,” said HRW’s Bruno Stagno.

The rights group said government­s attack those living abroad that they deem a threat, including human rights activists, journalist­s and political opponents.

This had a “serious chilling effect on the rights of freedom of expression... for those who are targeted, or fear they could be”, it said.

HRW gave the example of the 2018 murder and dismemberm­ent of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Türkiye, after he entered the Istanbul consulate to obtain travel documents.

Others have been abducted, it said, like Belarusian journalist Roman Protasevic­h, who was arrested after his flight from Greece to Lithuania was forced to land in Minsk in 2021. He was sentenced to eight years in jail, then “pardoned”.

It said countries had also attacked family members to coerce dissidents into silence.

Police in Chechnya abducted the mother of Ibragim Yangulbaev, who runs an anti-government Telegram channel from abroad, and sentenced her to five and a half years in prison, HRW said. –

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