February 2, 2018
Tunisian journalists on Friday staged a demonstration in Tunis to protest alleged government restrictions on their activities.
Held outside the headquarters of the Tunisian Journalists Syndicate, protesters decried restrictions on their journalistic activities imposed by Tunisia’s Interior Ministry.
Organized by syndicate members, Friday’s protest was endorsed by the Tunisian Human Rights League, an NGO; the Tunisian General Labor Union, the country’s largest labor union; and a number of prominent political and judicial figures.
“The current government, especially Interior Minister Lotfi Brahem, remain silent while journalists are being subject to persecution,” syndicate head Naji Baghouri said on the demonstration’s sidelines.
He went on to call for a nationwide general strike if government ministers remained “complicit” in the persecution of journalists.
Baghouri pointed in particular to the interior minister’s recent admission — made during a Monday session of parliament — that the ministry was tapping certain journalists’ phones.
Amna Guellali, director of Human Rights Watch’s Tunis office, told Anadolu Agency: “Today’s protest comes against the backdrop of the ongoing erosion of press freedoms in Tunisia since the 2011 revolution.”
Source: Middle East Monitor.
Link: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20180202-tunisia-journalists-protest-erosion-of-press-freedoms/.
Tunisian journalists on Friday staged a demonstration in Tunis to protest alleged government restrictions on their activities.
Held outside the headquarters of the Tunisian Journalists Syndicate, protesters decried restrictions on their journalistic activities imposed by Tunisia’s Interior Ministry.
Organized by syndicate members, Friday’s protest was endorsed by the Tunisian Human Rights League, an NGO; the Tunisian General Labor Union, the country’s largest labor union; and a number of prominent political and judicial figures.
“The current government, especially Interior Minister Lotfi Brahem, remain silent while journalists are being subject to persecution,” syndicate head Naji Baghouri said on the demonstration’s sidelines.
He went on to call for a nationwide general strike if government ministers remained “complicit” in the persecution of journalists.
Baghouri pointed in particular to the interior minister’s recent admission — made during a Monday session of parliament — that the ministry was tapping certain journalists’ phones.
Amna Guellali, director of Human Rights Watch’s Tunis office, told Anadolu Agency: “Today’s protest comes against the backdrop of the ongoing erosion of press freedoms in Tunisia since the 2011 revolution.”
Source: Middle East Monitor.
Link: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20180202-tunisia-journalists-protest-erosion-of-press-freedoms/.
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