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UAE Concerned About Muslim Brotherhood Trial,
Court Judgment in Similar Case Raises Justice Issues, a Statement
By Human Rights Watch
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 5, 2013
A court judgment in an earlier
United Arab Emirates (UAE) trial raises serious concerns about a similar
trial set to begin on November 5, 2013, Human Rights Watch said today. The
UAE Federal Supreme Court’s July 5 verdict in the case of 69 people
found guilty of attempting to overthrow the country’s political system
calls into question the ability of the country’s judicial system to uphold
basic rights of free speech and peaceful association. The November 5 trial
is of 30 people accused of similar crimes.
From the court’s reasoning
it appears that those convicted in the earlier case simply exercised their
legitimate rights to free expression and association, Human Rights Watch
said after reviewing a translation of the judgment. The bulk of the evidence
in the 243-page judgment focuses on the peaceful political activities of the
accused and their ties to an Emirati Islamist group, al-Islah, which the
judgment asserts is a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood. The only evidence
that suggests any intention to overthrow the government is a confession by
one defendant, Ahmed al-Suweidi, whom authorities forcibly disappeared for 5
months after his arrest on March 26, 2012. In court al-Suweidi denied all
the charges.
“The court’s judgment exposes the rank injustice of the
convictions,” said
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Aside
from one apparently coerced confession, the judgment describes a political
society advocating social justice through peaceful political reform.”
None of the 69 detainees in the earlier trial
had access to legal assistance for months in pretrial detention. During
the trial, 22 of the 94 defendants smuggled out handwritten notes alleging
that they had endured mistreatment that in some cases
amounted to torture. There is no evidence that the court investigated
these claims. The court convicted 69 of the defendants on July 2 and
sentenced them to prison terms of up to 10 years.
On November 5, 14
Egyptians and 16 Emiratis will go on trial at the state security court on
charges of running a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood in Abu Dhabi. Like
many of those convicted in July, they allege that UAE authorities subjected
them to torture in detention and denied them access to legal assistance for
many months.
Prior to the opening session in the earlier trial, on
March 4, reliable local sources told Human Rights Watch that the
prosecution’s case was largely based on confessions from two defendants,
though only one was mentioned in the judgment.
Fifteen pages of the
judgment are dedicated to al-Suweidi’s confession, which paraphrases his
detailed descriptions of the structure of al-Islah and its supposed aims.
The verdict declares that, “He, with the collaboration of others,
established and administered the organization of the Muslim Brotherhood in
the UAE, calling for actions opposing the basic principles of rule in the
UAE and with the aim of toppling the regime and seizing power.”
There
is nothing in the judgment aside from al-Suweidi’s disputed confession that
suggests those convicted were doing anything other than expressing opinions
in the context of an organization whose goal was political reform, Human
Rights Watch found.
Al-Suweidi’s confession identifies two well-known
Emirati human rights lawyers, Mohammed al-Mansoori and Mohammed al-Roken, as
key figures in the organization. The judgment says that al-Mansoori “set out
a clear vision: a demand for an elected national council, pressuring the
state internally and externally, defaming the UAE’s image to force
recognition of their organization and to allow their work to take place
publicly in the UAE.”
Members of al-Islah, notably al-Roken and al-Mansoori,
“communicated with international organizations including Human Rights
Watch,” “sought to control the associations of teachers and lawyers in the
UAE,” and “communicated with embassies of other countries,” the judgment
said.
Al-Mansoori acknowledged in the judgment that he ran a website
and participated in televised political debates broadcast from outside of
the UAE. According to the judgment, “when confronted that some of his
speeches… were defamation of the state and its government and an attempt to
incite internal public opinion against them, he said that he depicted the
reality and what he talked about was the result of violations by some
officials of UAE laws and its constitution.”
The preamble to the
UAE’s 1971 constitution states that the country will progress “by steps
toward a comprehensive, representative, democratic regime.”
The
judgment says that investigators “confronted” al-Roken with a Whatsapp text
on his phone titled “Emirati citizen: where to?” The message asked why a
prominent Kuwaiti Islamic scholar had been banned from entering the UAE, and
included a link to an Associated Press article on the detention in 2011 of
five UAE nationals whom al-Roken represented and a text message linking to
the UAE page of the Human Rights Watch website. According to the judgment,
al-Roken described his role as to provide “balanced political analysis based
on information about many issues.”
Twenty-nine pages of the judgment
summarize details of four audio recordings of al-Islah members discussing
domestic political issues that, according to the judgment, total more than
22 hours. The judgment quotes some short excerpts verbatim, but paraphrases
much of what the speakers allegedly said.
On May 26, 2011, according
to the verdict, one speaker posed a question of how the group should respond
to the Arab uprisings: “Dear brothers, in the midst of the revolutions that
took place in the Arab world, such as in Egypt and other countries, what is
our role in this great movement within the region? Do we have to participate
and go to the streets with them or do we have another role?” Another speaker
at a February 6, 2012 meeting said, “Our Tahrir Square is Twitter.”
Much of what the recordings apparently describe is peaceful political
debate. During the February 6, 2012 conversation, one speaker posed a range
of questions that included, “Are Emirati nationals afraid to express their
opinions?”; “How do you feel when you know that your job depends on the
approval of certain bodies?”; and, “Can economic prosperity come before
human dignity?” The judgment even quotes one of the speakers expressing what
might be considered exculpatory evidence: “I want to conclude that we in the
United Arab Emirates are not a threat to the security of the people or the
systems of the regime.”
The right to freedom of association
guarantees everyone the right to join with others to attain a particular
objective. Article 24 of the Arab Charter on Human Rights and article 33 of
the UAE Constitution protect this right with the caveat that it is only
guaranteed “within the limits of the law.”
“This judgment sends a
message to Emirati citizens that engaging in free-thinking political debate
and criticizing their government are treasonous acts,” Stork said. “In the
current repressive climate the best way for Emiratis to stay out of jail is
for them to exercise their right to remain silent.”
***
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on the UAE, please
visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/united-arab-emirates
For
more information, please contact:
In London, Nicholas McGeehan (English): +44-751-395-6155; or
mcgeehn@hrw.org In Washington, DC,
Joe Stork (English): +1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or
storkj@hrw.org In Cairo, Tamara
Alrifai (English, Arabic, French, Spanish): +20-122-751-2450 (mobile); or
alrifat@hrw.org
Human Rights Watch, 350 5th Ave, New York, NY 10118-0110 United States.
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