Reporters Without Borders today strongly condemned police who
detained and beat Tunisian journalist, Sihem Bensedrine, president of
the working group on press freedom in North Africa, and her husband,
Omar Mestiri, managing editor of the newspaper Kalima on their arrival
at la Goulette port yesterday.
The couple were seized by customs officers at the port in the
northern suburbs of Tunis and held for six hours, during which time
they were physically assaulted by the political police. They were also
subjected to a thorough body search and police seized and copied the
hard discs from their laptop computers.
"It is outrageous for a country which claims to be in the forefront of modernity in the region to carry out this kind of violent misuse of authority against Tunisian journalists and human rights activists in their own country," the worldwide press freedom organisation said.
"We call on the Tunisian authorities to fully investigate these police excesses", the organisation added, pointing out that Tunisia is ranked 145 out of 169 countries in Reporters Without Borders's worldwide press freedom index.
Sihem Bensedrine, who was left with bruises to her body, told Reporters Without Borders that said she had her husband would be making a complaint against the customs for "brutality" and "false imprisonment". She said police had seized around 60 documents by copying them from their hard discs. The customs had also refused to give the two journalists a docket for their confiscated property as the law requires.
Bensedrine, whose organisation is a partner of Reporters Without Borders, was on 7 February awarded the 2008 peace prize by the Danish Peace Foundation.
"It is outrageous for a country which claims to be in the forefront of modernity in the region to carry out this kind of violent misuse of authority against Tunisian journalists and human rights activists in their own country," the worldwide press freedom organisation said.
"We call on the Tunisian authorities to fully investigate these police excesses", the organisation added, pointing out that Tunisia is ranked 145 out of 169 countries in Reporters Without Borders's worldwide press freedom index.
Sihem Bensedrine, who was left with bruises to her body, told Reporters Without Borders that said she had her husband would be making a complaint against the customs for "brutality" and "false imprisonment". She said police had seized around 60 documents by copying them from their hard discs. The customs had also refused to give the two journalists a docket for their confiscated property as the law requires.
Bensedrine, whose organisation is a partner of Reporters Without Borders, was on 7 February awarded the 2008 peace prize by the Danish Peace Foundation.
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