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Algeria:
Arrests at Protest Against President, Officials Target Movement Opposing
Bouteflika’s Fourth Term
a Human Rights Watch Report
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 5, 2014
Algerian authorities should immediately release two men
arrested on April 16, 2014, for peacefully protesting and drop charges
against them, Human Rights Watch said today. The men were arrested at the
Central University in Algiers during a protest organized by the
Barakat (Enough) movement, which advocates term limits and opposes a
fourth term for President Abdelaziz Bouteflika. The president won
reelection on April 17.
On April 20, Mohand Kadi, a youth activist,
and Moez Bennecir, a Tunisian national living in
Algeria, were charged with participating in an “unlawful non-armed
gathering harming public order,” under articles 97 and 98 of the Algerian
penal code, which carries a punishment of up to a year in prison.
“Time and again, Algerian authorities are using repressive laws to
prosecute those who simply express peaceful dissent,” said
Eric Goldstein, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. “Officials have been targeting and harassing democracy
advocates affiliated with the Barakat movement.”
The men have been
kept in pretrial detention since their arrest. A first instance tribunal
in Algiers is to decide on May 4 whether to release them pending trial,
their lawyer, Noureddine Benisaad, told Human Rights Watch.
The
Algerian government should promptly rescind the 2001 blanket ban on
protests in Algiers and amend the 1991 Law on Public Meetings and
Demonstrations and the criminal code to conform to international human
rights standards, Human Rights Watch said. The changes should eliminate
any possibility of criminal charges for participating in peaceful
gatherings.
In recent years, Algerian authorities have frequently
repressed peaceful protests, using preemptive techniques, including
arresting organizers in advance and blocking access to demonstration
sites. Several human rights activists and union leaders have faced charges
related to the peaceful exercise of their right to assemble or their
expressions of support for strikes and demonstrations.
During the
presidential campaign, except for a short lull between March 15 and April
16, authorities routinely forcibly dispersed protesters opposing
Bouteflika’s fourth term, especially Barakat members. Officials arrested
hundreds of people in Algiers, detaining them for hours in police
stations. Security forces arrested
Barakat supporters at protests on at least three occasions in March.
An official of a government-appointed commission was quoted in an
interview published on April 23 in the independent newspaper Ennahar as
saying Barakat activists should be charged and prosecuted for defamation,
disrupting the public order, and attempting to destabilize the state,
because of their protests throughout the country. The official, Farouk
Ksentini, president of the National Consultative Commission for the
Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, called Barakat members “foreign
agents” and said their slogans against the president’s fourth term were
illegal because the Algerian Constitution does allow the incumbent
president to seek new terms.
The Algerian criminal code contains
various articles that could lead to prosecution and imprisonment for
exercising the rights to freedom of assembly or speech. Article 96 states
that anyone who distributes, sells, or exhibits leaflets harmful to the
public interest could face a prison sentence of up to three years and a
fine of up to 36,000 Algerian dinars (US$458). Article 97 prohibits
unarmed gatherings of a nature that disturb the public peace, and article
98 punishes with a prison term of up to one year anyone who participates
in such a gathering.
Parliament in 1989 enacted Law 89-28 Governing
Public Meetings and Demonstrations, which was amended in 1991 to
significantly reduce the right to assemble and to hold meetings.
Under the law, a group planning a public gathering must seek authorization
from the governor three days in advance. The law defines public
demonstrations as “processions, parades or gatherings of people and,
generally, all exhibitions on public roads” and says organizers must
request an authorization from the governor at least eight days in advance.
The governor is supposed to give his written authorization or refusal at
least five days before the demonstration date, and deliver a receipt
immediately when the request is made. However, the administration has
often failed to provide the receipt, leaving organizers unable to prove
they submitted their request in time.
The law also provides for a
prison sentence of up to one year and a fine of 15,000 dinars ($191) for
those who participate in an illegal gathering.
Authorities imposed
the ban on all demonstrations in Algiers on June 18, 2001, four days after
a huge march in Algiers for the rights of the Amazigh, or Berber, ethnic
group. The protest drew participants from all over the Amazigh-majority
Kabylia region and resulted in some looting of shops and clashes involving
the police, demonstrators, and local youths. Authorities did not rescind
the ban in 2011, when they lifted the 19-year state of emergency.
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Algeria, please see:
http://www.hrw.org/fr/middle-eastn-africa/algeria
For more
information, please contact:
In Tunis, Amna Guellali (English, French, Arabic): +216-24-485-324
(mobile);
or guellaa@hrw.org. Follow on
Twitter @aguellaa
In Washington, DC, Eric Goldstein (English, French): +1-917-519-4736
(mobile);
or goldstr@hrw.org. Follow on
Twitter @goldsteinricky
In Paris, Jean-Marie Fardeau (French, English, Portuguese):
+33-143-595-531; or +33-645-852-487 (mobile);
or fardeaj@hrw.org. Follow on
Twitter @jmf60
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