New York, September 30, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is very concerned about the health of imprisoned Tunisian journalist Hamadi
Jebali, who is in the 16th day of a hunger strike protesting 14 years
of unjust imprisonment.
The journalist did not feel well enough to leave his cell when his wife,
Wahida Jebali, went to the Mahdia prison for her weekly visit on Tuesday,
she told CPJ. A fellow inmate told her that the journalist was weak and
his condition was deteriorating, she said.
"My husband can no longer bear the suffering and I don't know what to
do. I am on my own and can only ask for help to save the life of my husband
and his family," she said. She has sent several appeals to President Ben
Ali and Minister of Justice and Human Rights Bechir Tekari, but they have
gone unanswered.
Jebali, former editor of Al-Fajr, the now-defunct weekly newspaper
of the banned Islamic Al-Nahda party, was first imprisoned in 1991 for
an article calling for the abolition of military tribunals in Tunisia.
Tried the following year by a military court, along with 279 others accused
of belonging to Al-Nahda, he was sentenced to 16 years in prison.
International human rights groups monitoring the mass trial concluded
that the proceedings fell far below international standards of justice.
The state presented no evidence against Jebali, implicitly basing the
charge on his association with Al-Fajr.
Jebali's continued imprisonment comes as the Tunisian government is preparing
to host the World Summit for the Information Society, a United Nation-sponsored
gathering seeking to establish international regulations for the Internet.
Thousands of government, business, media, and human rights leaders are
due to attend the November summit.

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