• Government engineers ouster of independent journalist union leaders.
• Two journalists are jailed in retaliation for critical reporting.
97: Percentage of newspaper campaign coverage that was devoted to President Ben Ali.
President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali was re-elected to a fifth term with 90 percent of the vote amid severe restrictions on independent reporting. Ben Ali’s government went after the country’s journalist union, bringing down its democratically elected board, while his police bullied and harassed critical reporters. Two journalists, one of them a leading critic of the president, were in jail in late year.
ATTACKS ON
THE PRESS: 2009
• Main Index
MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA
• Regional Analysis:
Human rights coverage spreads despite government pushback
Country Summaries
• Bahrain
• Egypt
• Iran
• Iraq
• Israel, Occupied Palestinian Territories
• Libya
• Morocco
• Sudan
• Tunisia
• Yemen
• Other developments
The election appeared
predetermined. Ben Ali faced three obscure candidates, two of whom said they
actually supported the incumbent. No independent observer was allowed to
monitor the October 25 vote. Ben Ali received an astonishing 97 percent of
print media coverage, according to a survey by five local human rights groups.
Nevertheless, Ben Ali assailed a “tiny minority” of Tunisians for “waging a
desperate campaign with a number of foreign journalists, so as to cast doubt
upon the outcome of elections.”
Florence Beaugé, a
correspondent for the French daily Le
Monde, tried to cover the
polling but was put on a flight back to
The independent news site Kalima, which is blocked domestically, was targeted throughout October. Kalima journalists were detained by police for several hours after
taking pictures of campaign scenes in the northern city of
In November, CPJ honored Naziha Réjiba, a fellow Kalima editor and founder, with a 2009 International Press Freedom Award. “I am
neither a hero nor a victim, but a journalist who wishes to work under normal
conditions,” she told a crowd of hundreds who gathered in
That repression includes censorship, assaults,
and detentions. On October 10, authorities seized an issue of the weekly Al-Tariq al-Jadeed, owned by the opposition Al-Tajdeed Movement, for “violating the
electoral code” after the paper published the platform of its candidate, Ahmed
Ibrahim, the movement said in a statement.
Slim Boukhdhir, a
journalist long persecuted for his criticism of Ben Ali, said he was kidnapped
near his
Two writers were in jail
when CPJ conducted its annual census of imprisoned journalists on December 1.
Taoufik Ben Brik, a contributor to several European media outlets and one of
Ben Ali’s top critics, was arrested in late October and later sentenced to six
months in prison on trumped-up charges of assault, property damage, defamation,
and violating public morality, according to CPJ interviews and news reports.
Ben Brik was not brought to the
Zuhair Makhlouf, a
political activist and contributor to Assabil
Online, a Tunisian news Web
site, was arrested on October 20 and charged with “harming and disturbing others
through the public communication network.” He was arrested after taking
pictures and writing an article about pollution in the industrial areas of
Nabeul, south of
Mohamed Abbou, a formerly
imprisoned blogger and human rights lawyer, was placed under constant police
surveillance and subjected to a smear campaign in government-backed newspapers
beginning in mid-year. Abbou had given interviews to European media and
Al-Jazeera in which he described his 36 months in prison, denounced police
torture, and criticized the government’s use of the courts to settle scores,
according to local human rights groups. Two other formerly imprisoned
journalists, Abdallah Zouari and Hamadi Jebali, told CPJ that they, too, were
under tight police surveillance. The journalists, colleagues at the now-defunct
Islamist weekly Al-Fajr, had both served long prison terms on vague
antistate charges.
The government helped
engineer the ouster of the elected leaders of the National Syndicate of
Tunisian Journalists, a professional organization that had been considered
independent. The syndicate’s leadership had drawn authorities’ ire by issuing a
report in May critical of press freedom conditions, and later refusing to
endorse Ben Ali or any other candidate for president. With the backing of the
Ministry of Communications, pro-government syndicate members circulated a
petition of no-confidence in the leadership.
Neji Bghouri, then syndicate
president, told CPJ that a number of journalists had been intimidated or
threatened with loss of employment if they did not join the petition.
“Privately owned media are pressuring their journalists to sign the petition
for fear of being deprived of public support and advertising revenue,” he told
CPJ at the time. The Tunisia External Communication Agency selectively
distributes official advertising to outlets aligned with the government, CPJ
research shows.
In August, the syndicate’s
leaders were replaced at a meeting stacked with pro-government members. The
first order of business for the reconstituted syndicate was sending a message
of allegiance to Ben Ali for his “sustained keenness on further promoting the
Tunisian media landscape.” The new leadership ignored attacks on press freedom,
among them an October police raid at the
Ownership of private
broadcast media was dominated by Ben Ali’s relatives and close friends, a
situation the Tunisian Syndicate of Free Radio Stations condemned in October as
a “policy of cronyism.” Ben Ali’s son-in-law, Sakhr Materi, established a
religious radio broadcaster called Ezzeitouna in 2007 and was given approval to
set up a television station under the same name, according to news reports. In
April, Materi also took control of Dar Assabah, the oldest and one of the most
important privately owned print media groups in the country. Most privately
owned media outlets continuously praised Ben Ali’s leadership and attacked his
critics.
CPJ wrote twice to Ben Ali
in 2009 to urge him to end attacks on journalists and to bring his government’s
practices in line with standards outlined in the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights. CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon noted that “acts
of reprisal against critical journalism are routine, systematic, and continue
unabated.” He added: “The failure to protect freedom of expression is all the
more disheartening because

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