Tunisia. Constitution JANUARY 2016

Similar documents
UPR Submission Tunisia November 2011

Tunisia: New draft anti-terrorism law will further undermine human rights

Uganda. Freedom of Assembly JANUARY 2017

TUNISIA REFORM OF REPRESSIVE LAWS AND PRACTICES LAGGING

LEBANON. Torture, Ill-Treatment, and Prison Conditions

Appeal to the People's Representatives to Abandon Consideration of the Draft Law on Prosecution of Abuses Against the Armed Forces

JANUARY 2018 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Gambia

United Arab Emirates

HONDURAS. Lack of Accountability for Post-Coup Abuses JANUARY 2013

Algeria. Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review. First session of the UPR Working Group, 7-11 April 2008

Oman. Authorities often have relied on provisions in the 2002 Telecommunications Act and 2011 Cybercrime Law to restrict freedom of expression online.

Concluding observations on the second periodic report of Cambodia*

Morocco/Western Sahara

FIDH RECOMMMENDATIONS ON HUMAN RIGHTS IN EGYPT. In view of the EU-Egypt Association Council April 2009

Uganda. Freedom of Expression and Assembly JANUARY 2016

JANUARY 2016 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Gambia

Submission to the United Nations Universal Periodic Review of. Tunisia. Third Cycle Twenty-Seventh Session of the UPR May 2017

Opinions adopted by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention at its sixty-eight session, November 2013

Jordan. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2012

Concluding observations on the third periodic report of Suriname*

Sri Lanka Draft Counter Terrorism Act of 2018

United Arab Emirates Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review

Yemen. Yemen faces a growing humanitarian crisis, with nearly half the population lacking sufficient food, according to UN agencies.

Opinions adopted by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention at its seventy-ninth session, August 2017

JANUARY 2018 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Mali

Uganda. Freedom of Assembly and Expression JANUARY 2012

UPR Submission Saudi Arabia March 2013

JANUARY 2018 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Côte d Ivoire

Lebanon. Spillover Violence from Syria JANUARY 2014

International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance

Opinions adopted by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention at its seventy-eighth session, April 2017

Appendix II: Legal Provisions

amnesty international

Cuba. Arbitrary Detentions and Short-Term Imprisonment JANUARY 2014

Canada. Violence against Indigenous Women and Girls JANUARY 2016

Concluding observations on the fourth periodic report of Uzbekistan*

JANUARY 2017 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Gambia

QATAR: BRIEFING TO THE UNITED NATIONS COMMITTEE AGAINST TORTURE 49 TH SESSION, NOVEMBER 2012

The human rights situation in Sudan

Bahrain. Right to Assembly JANUARY 2012

UN Security Council, Report of the Secretary-General on the AU/UN Hybrid Operation in Darfur, 12 July 2013, UN Doc S/2013/420. 2

September I. Secret detentions, renditions and other human rights violations under the war on terror

Kenya. Conduct of Security Forces JANUARY 2017

Morocco. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2015

Uganda. Freedoms of Assembly and Expression

Consideration of reports submitted by States parties under article 40 of the Covenant. Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee

Tunisia: The Trial of Ben Ali, Others for Killing Protesters Questions and Answers

SOUTH Human Rights Violations: Kim Sam-sok and Kim Un-ju

Morocco and Western Sahara

European Parliament resolution of 16 February 2012 on the situation in Syria (2012/2543(RSP)) The European Parliament,

CED/C/TUN/1. International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance

Honduras. Police Abuses and Corruption JANUARY 2014

1 September 2009 Public. Amnesty International. Qatar. Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review

International covenant on civil and political rights CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 40 OF THE COVENANT

Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

Chile. not enter into force because the executive branch did not have legal authority to issue it.

Sri Lanka. Truth, Reconciliation, and Accountability for Past Abuses JANUARY 2018

Le Président The President

SUDAN Amnesty International submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review 11 th session of the UPR Working Group, May 2011

Swaziland. Freedom of Association and Assembly JANUARY 2016

Belarus. Media Freedom, Attacks on Journalists JANUARY 2014

Algeria. Freedom of Expression and Assembly

Republic of Korea (South Korea)

Honduras. Police Abuse and Corruption JANUARY 2016

Christian Aid Ireland s submission on civil society space 31 March 2017

Concluding observations of the Committee against Torture

Rwanda. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2018

Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

Kyrgyzstan. Kyrgyzstan became a member of the UN Human Rights Council in January 2016.

Index: Preface...3 The legal basis for the freedom of movement and its reduction.. 5 Manifestations of violations and breach of legal texts.

Advance Unedited Version

Contained in this weekly update are external items on Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, Sudan and Peru.

May 12, The Honorable Barack Obama President of the United States The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington DC 20500

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

Situation in Egypt and Syria, in particular of Christian communities

Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

The Islamic Judiciary

Algeria. Presidential Election. Freedom of Expression and Assembly

Resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council on 29 September /16. Human rights in the administration of justice, including juvenile justice

ANTI-TERROR LAW [TERRORLAW] Act No. 3713: LAW TO FIGHT TERRORISM [Published in the Official Gazette on 12 April 1991]

Papua New Guinea. Women s and Girls Rights JANUARY 2017

Jordan. Freedom of Expression and Belief JANUARY 2016

South Korea. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2018

Facts and figures about Amnesty International and its work for human rights

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL Briefing

ADVANCE QUESTIONS TO IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF- ADD.1

Consideration of reports submitted by States parties under article 19 of the convention

General Recommendations of the Special Rapporteur on torture 1

List of issues prior to submission of the fourth periodic report of Bulgaria**

Sudan. Conflict and Abuses in Darfur JANUARY 2017

CRC/C/OPAC/YEM/CO/1. Convention on the Rights of the Child. United Nations

CHAD. Time to narrow the gap between rhetoric and practices

Concluding observations on the third periodic report of Belgium*

PREVENTING RADICALISATION IN DETENTION VIENNA, OCTOBER 2017

JORDAN Stakeholder Report for the United Nations Universal Periodic Review

Malaysia Irene Fernandez defends rights of migrant workers despite conviction

Chapter 8 International legal standards for the protection of persons deprived of their liberty

FIGURES ABOUT AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL AND ITS WORK FOR HUMAN RIGHTS. -- Amnesty International was launched in 1961 by British lawyer Peter Benenson.

HUMAN RIGHTS PRIORITIES FOR THE NEW GAMBIAN GOVERNMENT

Human Rights Watch UPR Submission. Pakistan February 2008

Transcription:

JANUARY 2016 COUNTRY SUMMARY Tunisia Tunisia experienced several deadly attacks by Islamist extremists in 2015 that left dozens of people dead and others injured. On March 18, two gunmen attacked the Bardo Museum, adjacent to Tunisia s parliament, killing 21 foreign tourists and one Tunisian security agent. On June 26, a gunman rampaged through a beach resort in Sousse, killing 38 foreign tourists. On November 24, a suicide attack on a bus killed 12 presidential guards and wounded 20 others, including four civilians. The attacks prompted the government to invoke a 1978 decree to declare a state of emergency that empowered authorities to ban strikes or demonstrations deemed to threaten public order, and to prohibit gatherings likely to provoke or sustain disorder. Constitution The 2014 constitution guarantees key civil, political, social, economic, and cultural rights. Tunisian authorities made little progress in overhauling legislation that fails to comply with the constitution, particularly the penal code and code of criminal procedures. Article 29 of the constitution affords detainees the right to be represented by a lawyer, but the code of criminal procedures allows detainees to consult a lawyer only after they appear before an investigative judge, up to six days after arrest. Parliament has yet to debate a draft law to reform the Code of Criminal Procedures that the previous government submitted in April 2013. If enacted, the proposed law would affirm the right of detainees to access a lawyer promptly after arrest and to have their lawyer present during their interrogation and court hearings. The penal code, the Code of Military Justice, and the Telecommunications Law still include articles that punish with imprisonment speech offenses, such as defamation of public officials, harming public order and public morals, and spreading false information. 1

Freedom of Expression In 2015, authorities prosecuted several people for alleged defamation or insult of state officials and on charges of harming public order or public morals. Authorities also used counterterrorism legislation to prosecute a few journalists and bloggers for publishing information or their opinions. Judicial authorities charged Noureddine Mbarki, chief editor of Akher Khabar online, with complicity in terrorism on July 8 for publishing a photograph of gunman Seifeddine Rezgui getting out of a car driven by another person shortly before he killed 38 foreigners in the June 26 Sousse attack. Authorities also detained Abdelfattah Saied, a teacher, on the same charge on July 22 after he posted a video on Facebook that accused the security forces of planning the Sousse attack and duping Rezgui into carrying it out. He also faced the charge of defaming a public servant for publishing a caricature of Prime Minister Habib Essid on his Facebook page. On March 2, a military appeals court sentenced Yassine Ayari, a prominent blogger, to six months in prison for Facebook posts that criticized the army and its top echelons. Several posts in August and September 2014 had criticized the minister of defense for refusing to appoint a new head of military intelligence, and accused him of weakening military institutions. Ayari spent four months in prison before his release on April 16, 2015. Transitional Justice and Accountability On December 24, 2013, the National Constituent Assembly (NCA) adopted the Law on Establishing and Organizing Transitional Justice. The law sets out a comprehensive approach to addressing past human rights abuses. It provides criminal accountability via specialized chambers within the civil court system to adjudicate cases arising from past human rights violations, including abuses committed by military and security forces. The law also established a Truth and Dignity Commission (TDC) tasked with uncovering the truth about abuses committed between July 1955, shortly before Tunisia s independence 2

from France, and the law s adoption in 2013. The NCA elected 15 of the TDC s members on May 15, 2014, and in August 2015, the TDC said it had received 16,000 complaints from people alleging human rights abuses and had begun processing them. On July 14, however, the government approved a draft Law on Economic and Financial Reconciliation, strongly supported by President Essebsi. If enacted, the law will offer broad amnesty to officials of the former Ben Ali regime and will terminate prosecutions and trials of, and cancel any sentences against, corrupt business executives who submit a reconciliation request to a state-run commission. The proposed law would threaten the TDC s role, mandated under the transitional justice law, to mediate cases relating to corruption and economic crimes, which were endemic during the 23-year rule of former President Ben Ali. Counterterrorism and Security Tunisia s parliament adopted a new counterterrorism law on July 25 that imperils human rights and lacks adequate safeguards against abuses. The law, which replaced the 2003 counterterrorism law enacted by the Ben Ali administration, affords the security forces broad and vague monitoring and surveillance powers, extends incommunicado detention from six to up to 15 days for terrorism suspects, and permits courts to close hearings to the public and allow the identities of witnesses to be withheld from defendants. A Human Rights Watch study from July found that Tunisian authorities, under the guise of fighting terrorism, were arbitrarily banning persons under age 35 from travel to countries including Algeria, Libya, Morocco, and Turkey unless they obtain their father s authorization to travel, even though Tunisian law does not require adults to obtain such authorization. Judicial Independence The constitution guarantees judicial independence. On May 15, parliament approved a law to create a constitutionally mandated Supreme Judicial Council (SJC). Its functions will include making judicial appointments and overseeing judicial discipline and the career progression of judges. 3

A week after its adoption, 30 members of parliament challenged the new law before the Constitutional Council, itself a temporary body, arguing that its composition and mandate failed to implement the constitutional chapter on the judiciary. In June, the council issued a decision invalidating the law and sent it back to the parliament for revision. On November 13, the parliament adopted the final version of the law, upholding the Constitional Council s request to remove membership of the general prosecutor of military justice as an ex-officio member. Torture and Ill-Treatment In May 2014, the UN special rapporteur on torture said that Tunisian prosecutors and judges had taken very little action to pursue torture complaints dating from the Ben Ali era and since the 2011 revolution. This failure continued through 2015. Although the National Constituent Assembly approved legislation to create a 16-member High Authority for the Prevention of Torture in October 2013, by September the parliament had yet to select any members. Under its mandate, the High Authority will carry out unannounced inspections of detention sites. In 2015, Tunisian law still allows police to deny those they arrest access to a lawyer for the first six days of their detention, typically the period when detainees face the greatest pressure to confess. The counterterrorism law adopted in July extended this to a maximum of 15 days in the case of terrorism suspects, increasing the risk of torture. There were several documented incidents of torture and other mistreatment in 2015. On August 4, seven men detained on suspicion of terrorism filed formal complaints of torture upon release. Shortly after, officers of the police counterterrorism unit they had accused rearrested them. The men underwent forensic medical examination that concluded that five of them bore marks consistent with their torture allegations. On August 10, the prosecutor of the First Instance Tribunal in Tunis opened an investigation but had yet to reveal its outcome at time of writing. Earlier, the prosecutor of the First Instance Tribunal of Sidi Bouzid opened an investigation into the case of Abdelmajid Ejday after he died on May 13 while held at the city s National 4

Guard headquarters. Ejday had filed a torture complaint four weeks earlier against officers from the same police unit force who had detained him in February. A forensic medical examination reported finding injuries on his body. At time of writing, the prosecutor had not announced the outcome of his investigation. Women s Rights The 2014 constitution provides improved protection for women s rights and obligates Tunisia to work towards achieving gender parity in elected assemblies. Tunisia has a personal status code that gives women greater rights within the family than those allowed by other states in the region, but the code retains some discriminatory provisions. These deny women an equal share with men of any inheritance and prohibit a mother who has remarried, unlike remarried fathers, from having her children live with her. Tunisia s parliament adopted a new law on November 10, which will allow women to travel with their minor children without getting permission from the children s father. Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Tunisia s penal code punishes consensual same-sex conduct with up to three years in prison. In March, Shams, a lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender group, was permitted to operate. On September 22, a 22-year-old man was sentenced to one year in prison on homosexuality charges, after being subjected to a forced anal exam, a practice that amounts to torture. Key International Actors Several United Nations agencies and foreign governments have committed to support Tunisia s transition since the 2011 revolution, focusing on technical and financial assistance to the economy and private sector, security sector support, and support for civil society and democratic practices. 5

In July, US President Barack Obama and President Essebsi signed an agreement in Washington making Tunisia a Major Non-NATO Ally, thereby enhancing Tunisia s eligibility to receive training on security and military financing of certain defense equipment. In July, the UN Working Group on the use of mercenaries visited Tunisia, and concluded that some 6,000 Tunisians had left the country to join extremist armed groups in Syria, Iraq, Mali, and Libya. The group urged the government to urgently stop the flow of Tunisians to join extremist groups abroad, dismantle recruitment networks, and devise and implement a comprehensive solution to the problem. 6