Amnesty Rights Today, 2018

Page 18

CHALLENGING REPRESSION AND BRUTALITY IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA Human rights defenders in the Middle East and North Africa faced an array of threats from governments and armed groups in 2018, but they have also been at the centre of stories of hard-won change. Women human rights defenders have been prominent on the front lines of resistance, challenging entrenched gender discrimination and other patterns of human rights violations. Nawal Benaissa, a prominent activist, was forced to move from the northern city of Al Hoceima to a different Moroccan city after harassment from the authorities. © Abdellah Azizi/Amnesty International.

In 2019 the work of human rights defenders will continue to be vital to stemming crackdowns by governments across the region and pressing for accountability for abuses.

WOMEN AT THE FOREFRONT OF CHALLENGING REPRESSION On 24 June, Saudi Arabia finally lifted its ban on women driving, just one of a range of discriminatory policies against women in the Kingdom. Long overdue, the step was a testament to the bravery of women human rights defenders who, for decades, drew international media attention to the ban. It was bitterly ironic then that the authorities subjected some of those who campaigned for the change to arbitrary detention and smear campaigns. Loujain al-Hathloul, Iman al-Nafjan and Aziza al-Yousef are among a group of activists held without charge since their arrest in May, a month before the ban was lifted, and sinisterly accused of being “traitors”. Their plight reflects that of human rights defenders more generally in the country, nearly all of whom have been sentenced to lengthy prison terms, placed under travel bans or forced to leave the country. Women’s rights activists in Iran have also been courageously protesting against an entrenched manifestation of a broader set of discriminatory practices against women. Dozens removed their headscarves in public to challenge

forced hijab (veiling) and disrupt Iranian society’s apparent acquiescence in this abusive and degrading practice. The authorities’ violent crackdown forms part of a wider wave of repression against human rights defenders. Dozens of women have been beaten and arbitrarily detained and, in some cases, prosecuted and imprisoned for their peaceful campaigning. One of them, Roya Saghiri, began serving a 23-month prison sentence in August for “disturbing public order”. Their lawyers and supporters have also been harassed. For example, Nasrin Sotoudeh, an award-winning human rights lawyer, was arrested in June and charged with serious national security offences. In Egypt, human rights defenders also felt the full force of a government intent on crushing challenges to its legitimacy. While moments of victory, like the releases of woman human rights defender Mahienour el-Massry in January and human rights lawyer Haytham Mohamdeen in October, punctured the climate of repression, too many others remain behind bars on ludicrous terrorism or security-related charges. Amal Fathy was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment in September for posting a video on Facebook condemning sexual harassment and the government’s failure to address it. Ezzat Ghoniem, co-founder and director of the Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms, and Azzoz Mahgoub, a human rights lawyer in the same organization, remain in incommunicado detention despite a court order to release them on 4 September. 18

Thirty human rights defenders and staff of civil society organizations are under travel bans; 10 of them have had their assets frozen.

ATTEMPTS TO SILENCE PROTESTERS Human rights defenders in the region have acted as a vital check on government excesses, exposing abuses by the security forces in the Maghreb, challenging half a century of Israeli military occupation of Palestinian territory and speaking truth to power in the Gulf. Nawal Benaissa, one of the leading voices of Hirak, a popular movement, spoke out for social justice and better health care in the Rif region of Morocco. Like hundreds of other peaceful protesters, she has been arrested and held in custody. In February, she received a 10-month suspended sentence and a fine for “inciting to commit an offence”. In an attempt to silence criticism of the security forces’ handling of the Hirak protests, the authorities also went after those defending the protesters. In February, Abdessadak El Bouchattaoui, a human rights lawyer, was sentenced to 20 months in prison and fined for his online posts. The Israeli authorities have long displayed brutality against those protesting its military occupation of Palestinian territory and its blockade of the Gaza Strip, a pattern manifested in its lethal response to the Great March of Return, in which the army


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