Published on 10 July 2009
24 February 2010 - Newspaper reporter freed after being held for three months without charge
19 February 2010 - Two journalists freed after being held for more than a month without charge
11 January 2010 - Authorities say nothing as arbitrary arrests continue
The press freedom situation in Syria continues to be very bad, Reporters Without Borders said today as French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner prepared to meet with Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad this weekend in Syria.
Five cyber-dissidents, including Habib Saleh and Firas Saad, are still detained. Several magazines, including Al-Shababik, Al-Mal and Syria Today, were recently banned. And Palestinian journalist Helmi Musa, who covers Israeli affairs for the newspaper Al-Safir, was arrested on 5 July in Damascus and was not released until this morning after being held in as yet unknown conditions.
“As part of the improvement in relations between France and Syria, we think that it is vital that the French Foreign Minister should stress to Syria the importance of keeping its promises to respect human rights and freedoms, including press freedom,” Reporters Without Borders said.
Kouchner said on 3 May, World Press Freedom day, that freedom of the press was one of the priorities of France’s Foreign policy.
Any liberalisation of the media in Syria is blocked by the 2001 press law, which stipulates that only the prime minister can issue permits for journalists to work and which allows for journalists to be arrested on wide range of charges including “attacking the state’s prestige or dignity, national unity and the morale of the armed forces.”
Online freedom of expression and information is openly controlled and the authorities have stepped up Internet filtering, making many websites inaccessible, including opposition Arabic-language sites and sites linked to Syria’s Kurdish minority.
At the same time, articles 285, 286 and 287 of the Syrian criminal code contribute to the legal and psychological pressure on Internet users. One of these, Habib Saleh, was given a three-year jail sentence on 15 March for posting articles critical of the government online.
Reporters Without Borders, whose representatives are still unable to get visas to visit Syria, urges France and the European Union to ask Syria to adopt measures to liberalise the media. Syria was ranked 159th out of 173 countries in the 2008 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
Writer and journalist Michel Kilo, 67, is an emblematic figure in the struggle for democracy in Syria. In his articles for Arab newspapers such as An-Nahar, Al-Hayat, As-Safir and Al Quds Al Arabi, he is well known for his acerbic political analyses.