Published on 20 August 2009
5 February 2010 - Court imposes new two-year sentence on website editor
3 February 2010 - Still held illegally, website editor is being tried again on same charge
14 January 2010 - Website editor still held three weeks after completing prison sentence
9 February 2010 - Heavy jail sentences for activists who wrote about plight of Sichuan earthquake victims
5 February 2010 - Did Gao Zhisheng die under torture in detention?
5 February 2010 - Court imposes new two-year sentence on website editor
Reporters Without Borders strongly condemns the six-month jail sentence which a Nouakchott court passed yesterday on Hanevy Ould Dehah, the editor of the website Taqadoumy, on a charge of “offending public decency.” Dehah has been held for the past two months in Dart Naim prison.
“The sole aim of this disproportionate sentence is to restore the reputation of Ibrahima Moctar Sarr, a politician whose financial dealings Dehah examined,” Reporters Without Borders said. “We hope this verdict is overturned on appeal and Dehah is soon released.”
Reporters Without Borders has obtained a copy of the court’s verdict. While finding Dehah guilty on the public decency charge, the court acquitted him on charges of defamation, inciting rebellion and inciting crimes and offences “because of the absence of enforceable laws applicable to electronic media offences.”
As well as sentencing him to six months in prison, it fined him 30,000 ouguiyas (83 euros) and ordered him to pay another 21,000 ouguiyas (59 euros) in legal costs. He has appealed.
Dehah was arrested on the orders of the Nouakchott prosecutor’s office on 18 June as a result of a complaint by Sarr, a presidential candidate and head of the opposition Alliance for Justice and Democracy/Movement for Renovation (AJD/MR), over an article posted on Taqadoumy on 22 April.
Headlined “Ibrahima Sarr’s sudden fortune,” it referred to “the purchase by Mr. Sarr of a villa costing 30 million ouguiyas on the Nouadhibou road in an area known as ‘university lands,’ one of the capital’s most elegant neighbourhoods.” Sarr and his family described the article as “defamatory and baseless.”
In September 2001, the Eritrean government ordered that all of the country’s privately owned publications be closed down. In the days that followed, police arrested above fifteen or so journalists and took them to Asmara’s police station No.