16 October 2009
IFJ Condemns "Injustice" as Journalists are Jailed in Morocco
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today condemned the
jailing of two journalists and their boss by a court in Morocco
accusing the authorities of "gross injustice."
The IFJ joined its affiliate, the Syndicat national de la presse
marocaine (SNPM), in condemning vigorously the jailing yesterday by a Rabat tribunal of Driss
Chahtane, managing director of Al Michaal newspaper and sentences
against his reporters, Rachid Mahamid and Mustapha Hayrane.
According to SNPM, Chahtane was arrested by the police in his office and
taken to prison immediately after the judge had pronounced the one-year
sentence. Mahamid and Hayrane were given a three-month jail sentence. All three
were convicted under clause 42 and 68 of the press code, following the
publication of a story on the health of the country's monarch on 3 September.
"Even by Moroccan
standards, this is a gross injustice and a flagrant abuse of the legal process, "said IFJ President Jim Boumelha. "These journalists have committed no
crime but they were tried and sentenced without being given the opportunity to
defend themselves. They must be freed and the sentences and fines struck off."
Reports say the lawsuit against Al Michaal newspaper followed the publication of an article
entitled "Al Michaal unveils the
reasons behind the palace's statement about the king's illness, which has
aroused public concern".
The public
prosecutor announced a police investigation of Al Michaal and another
Arabic-language news weekly, Al Ayam, on the grounds of spreading "lies
and false information."
The trial of
another newspaper, Al Jarida Al Oula, being prosecuted for publishing
"false information" about the king's health which began on September 29, is due
to resume on 21 October.
In a third trial
of newspapers in less than 15 days, Taoufik
Bouachrine and Khalid Guedda, respectively editor and cartoonist at Akhbar al Youm, Morocco's
second largest Arabic language daily appeared before a court in Ain Sebaa,
near Casablanca,
on Monday at the instigation of the Ministry of the Interior. The newspaper was closed without any court decision.
"These journalists are engaged in publishing
information which is of huge public interest, yet the authorities have decided
to hunt them down like common criminals. The current trials of journalists and
the closure of a newspaper have put into question the very future of democracy,"
added Boumelha.
For more information
contact the IFJ at
+32 2 235 2207
The IFJ represents over 600,000 journalists
in 123 countries worldwide










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