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Libya:
Journalists Under Attack, Assaulted, Kidnapped,
and Killed With Impunity
a Human Rights Watch Statement
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 20, 2015 (Tunis, February 9, 2015) –
Various armed groups in
Libya have violently attacked, kidnapped, intimidated, threatened, and
killed Libyan journalists with impunity over the past two years, causing
many to flee the country or impose self-censorship, Human Rights Watch said
in a report released today. At the same time, courts are prosecuting
journalists and others for defaming public officials and other offenses that
violate freedom of expression. The failure by successive governments and
interim authorities to protect journalists has wiped out much of the limited
media freedom that existed following the 2011 uprising that ousted the
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
The 54-page report, “War
on the Media: Journalists Under Attack in Libya,” says that authorities
failed to hold anyone accountable for attacks on journalists and media
outlets since 2012, most of which were committed by non-state actors.
Meanwhile, courts are prosecuting people, including journalists, for
speech-related offenses, particularly for defaming public officials. The
situation only worsened for journalists when armed conflicts erupted and
became endemic in May 2014, hastening the exodus from Libya by journalists
fearing for their safety.
“The climate of impunity has allowed
militias to assault, threaten, kidnap, or even kill journalists because of
their reporting or views,” said
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights
Watch. “Government authorities and non-state actors who control territory
should urgently condemn attacks on journalists and where possible hold those
responsible to account.”
Human Rights Watch, through interviews
conducted in Libya and remotely, documented at least 91 cases of threats and
assaults against journalists, 14 of them women, from mid-2012 until November
2014. The cases include 30 kidnappings or short-term arbitrary detention and
eight killings, although in some cases journalists may have been
unintentionally killed while reporting on violent incidents. Human Rights
Watch also documented 26 armed attacks against the offices of television and
radio stations. In most of the cases Human Rights Watch documented, evidence
suggested that the armed groups sought to punish journalists and media
outlets for their reporting, their opinions, or their perceived sympathies.
Consecutive interim authorities and elected governments have been unable
to rein in abusive militias that have proliferated since the end of the 2011
uprising, allowing them to operate with total impunity, Human Rights Watch
said. The failure to protect journalists, media workers, and writers was
only exacerbated with the outbreak of the armed conflicts in eastern Libya
in May 2014, which spread to the west in July. The fighting has left the
country with two governments claiming legitimacy, one an internationally
recognized government based out of al-Bayda and the other a self-proclaimed
government controlling Tripoli and parts of western Libya, yet neither able
to assert control over the entire territory. As the violence spread, an
increasing number of courts and prosecutors’ offices suspended operations,
leaving the judicial systems in a state of near- collapse in some areas.
Journalists were among the 250 people killed in apparent politically
motivated assassinations in Libya in 2014 that Human Rights Watch
documented. On May 26, unidentified assailants shot dead a prominent
journalist, Miftah Bouzeid, in Benghazi. Bouzeid, the editor-in-chief of
Burniq, an independent newspaper issued three times a week in Benghazi, was
a prominent and frequent critic of Islamist militias and political parties.
Despite local and international calls for a swift investigation, Bouzeid’s
assassins remain at large. Al-Mutassim al-Warfalli, a radio host for the
Libya al-Watan radio station, was shot dead by unknown assailants on October
8 in Benghazi. Al-Warfalli was a purported supporter of Islamist militias.
Some media outlets appeared to be attacked for having backed particular
parties to a conflict. Militias attacked Alassema TV station in Tripoli on
August 23 and 24, destroying equipment and knocking it permanently off the
air. Fawzia al-Balaazi, general director of the station then, told Human
Rights Watch that the attacking militias accused the channel of supporting
their adversaries. On January 9, 2015, unknown assailants attacked Al-Nabaa
TV in Tripoli, a Libyan private satellite TV station that backs the
Tripoli-based self-declared government, with rocket-propelled grenades
heavily damaging the building.
In none of the cases that Human Rights
Watch examined did the authorities conduct a serious investigation, if they
investigated at all. No one is known to have been prosecuted for wrongdoing
in any of the cases of attacks against journalists. Most Libyan journalists
told Human Rights Watch they saw no point in even reporting incidents to the
police since they would not pursue the attackers.
Meanwhile,
prosecutors have been bringing charges against journalists and others for
non-violent speech offenses. On November 17, Amara al-Khatabi, editor of
al-Ummah newspaper, was informed by a criminal court that he had been
sentenced in absentia on August 17 to five years in prison and a heavy fine.
The judge, who sentenced al-Khatabi for “insulting and slandering” public
officials by publishing a list of allegedly corrupt judges in November 2012,
also ordered the suspension of al-Khatabi’s civil rights during his
imprisonment and for a year after his release, and banned him from
practicing journalism for the duration of his prison term. Al-Khatabi, who
remained provisionally free, told Human Rights Watch he would seek a
retrial.
Two Tunisian journalists, Sofiene Chourabi and Nadhir Ktari,
were reported missing in eastern Libya in September 2014 and their fate
remains unknown. Human Rights Watch could not independently verify
conflicting reports of their alleged capture by militias affiliated with the
extremist group Islamic State (also known as ISIS). All parties in Libya
should work toward the release of the two journalists, immediately and
unharmed.
All government and other entities in Libya should
unequivocally condemn attacks against journalists and media workers and
carry out prompt, transparent, and impartial investigations where possible,
Human Rights Watch said. Libya’s House of Representatives should amend or
revoke laws that restrict the right to freedom of expression and the media,
particularly defamation and insult laws.
Member countries of the UN
Human Rights Council should convene a special session on accountability in
Libya with a view to establishing a Commission of Inquiry or a similar
mechanism to investigate serious and widespread human rights violations in
Libya. The potential violations should include those that may amount to war
crimes and crimes against humanity, such as politically motivated
assassinations and attacks against journalists. The UN and African special
rapporteurs on freedom of opinion and expression should pay particular
attention to attacks against journalists and media professionals in Libya,
and visit the country to investigate attacks against journalists and to make
recommendations on how to promote press freedom there.
“This is a
very dangerous time to be a journalist in Libya,” Stork said “Too many
journalists in post-Gaddafi Libya face a situation where saying what you
think can get you killed.”
“War on the Media: Journalists Under
Attack in Libya” is available at:
https://hrw.org/node/132678
For more Human Rights Watch reporting
on Libya, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/libya
For more
information, please contact: In Tunis, Hanan Salah (English, Arabic,
French, German): +216-54518498; or
salahh@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @HananMSalah In Tunis, Joe Stork
(English): +1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or
storkj@hrw.org In Amman, Fadi Al-Qadi (English, Arabic):
+962-7-9699-2396 (mobile); or qadif@hrw.org.
Follow on Twitter @fqadi In New York, Sarah Leah Whitson (English):
+1-718-362-0172 (mobile); or
whitsos@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @sarahleah1 In Geneva, Philippe
Dam (English, French): +41 22 738 0481 (work); or
damp@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter
@philippe_dam In London, David Mepham (English): +44-207-713-2766; or
+44-757-260-3995 (mobile); or
mephamd@hrw.org.
***
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