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Djibouti : 01/12/99 AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL |
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DJIBOUTI
Aref Mohamed Aref,
This follows new moves by the authorities to silence opposition critics and comes after a television interview he gave in October 1999 to a French journalist in which he expressed his non-violent views and criticized human rights violations in Djibouti - the journalist and cameraman were subsequently deported and their film confiscated. On 22 November 1999, during questioning by the police (gendarmerie) about the interview, he was told that proceedings had been opened against him on the charge of defamation (diffamation). This means he could be summoned again for questioning at any time, possibly remanded in custody, and be unfairly tried under a defamation law inconsistent with international standards on freedom of opinion and expression. BACKGROUND INFORMATION Aref Mohamed Aref, a prisoner of conscience from 1991 to 1992, has been the leading (and virtually only) human rights lawyer in Djibouti for some years. He has been an Amnesty International delegate at preliminary meetings on the establishment of an International Criminal Court and other missions and is a member of the African Human Rights Defenders network, established in Johannesburg in December 1998. In February 1999 he was jailed for six months after an unfair trial for alleged fraud (escroquerie) connected to a civil case in which he had been involved in 1994 (see Extra 15/99, 8 February 1999 and follow ups). Amnesty International believes the charges, which he denied, were politically motivated. He was released by the newly inaugurated president Ismael Omar Guelleh in May under an amnesty. In December 1998, security forces prevented him boarding a plane to Paris where he was due to attend a Human Rights Defenders Summit. His passport, confiscated at the time, has still not been returned to him and the ban imposed on him practising law is still in force (see News Release: 24 June 1999, AFR 23/05/99). In September 1999, Amnesty International issued an Urgent Action after a government crackdown on the last two remaining opposition newspapers in Djibouti, when three journalists from the papers were arrested. All have now been sentenced to prison terms and their newspapers banned because they published articles critical of the government (see UA 254/99, AFR 23/07/99, 28 September 1999 and updates). RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please
send telegrams/faxes/express/airmail letters in French or your own language: APPEALS TO (please note that fax numbers in Djibouti are sometimes difficult to obtain): President Minister of Justice COPIES TO: Prime Minister Minister of Foreign Affairs and to diplomatic representatives of DJIBOUTI accredited to your country.
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