Source: Human Rights Watch
No Evidence Presented About Individual Defendants’ Roles
(Paris) – Algerian
activists and others convicted on charges of holding an “armed
gathering” and violence against the police appear to have been convicted
after an unfair trial in which they were unable to challenge the
evidence against them, the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network
(EMHRN) and Human Rights Watch said today. Based on the written
judgment, the lower court seems to have centered its verdict on police
testimony that did not set out evidence implicating any individual
defendants in alleged violence during a demonstration in the southern
city of Laghouat on June 8, 2014.
A court in Laghouat found all 26 defendants guilty on June 18 after a
one-day trial, sentencing nine of them to six months in prison and the
other 17 in absentia to two years in prison. Most of those convicted in
absentia are well-known local activists who denied participating in the
demonstration.
“Courts should be determining individual criminal responsibility and
giving each defendant the opportunity to challenge the evidence against
them rather than seemingly applying a doctrine of ‘someone must pay,’ ”
said Michel Tubiana, EMHRN president.
After the Laghouat court convicted the group, four of the defendants
tried in absentia turned themselves in while two others were arrested.
All exercised their right to a new trial, and the court, in separate new
trials, acquitted them for lack of evidence, their lawyer, Noureddine
Ahmine, told the EMHRN and Human Rights Watch.
Djilali Ben Safieddine, one of the 17 defendants sentenced in absentia,
told EMHRN and Human Rights Watch that he was nowhere near the June 8
protest, had not been informed that he was charged, and never received a
summons to appear for the trial. Ben Safieddine, a private security
guard and a member of the Defense Committee of the Rights of Unemployed
in Laghouat, has avoided arrest and went into hiding.
Another local activist, Mohamed Rag, was arrested on June 30 near his
house in Laghouat and placed in pretrial detention pending his retrial.
He was acquitted on July 13.
The appeals hearing for the nine sentenced on June 18 is scheduled for August 4.
Aissa Dahb, an activist who participated in the June 8 protest, told
EMHRN and Human Rights Watch that about 20 people from local civil
society groups had gathered that day in front of the governorate to
protest the way the government selects recipients of public housing
units.
He said the group tried to talk to the mayor, who refused to receive
them. The group then went to the headquarters of the governorate to try
to meet with the governor, who also refused to meet with them. Dahb said
that six or seven security agents guarding the governorate assaulted El
Taher Yacoub, one of local activists, clubbing him on the head, leading
to clashes with security agents. Afterward, police reinforcements
arrived, he said.
Dahb said that following these clashes, Yacoub and another member of the
group, Ben Safieddine Khamisati, went to the police to file a complaint
against the officers who they said beat them. Dahb followed them in his
own car and saw Khamisati, Yacoub, and a third protester, Mohamed
Ziyadi, enter the police station. After some time, he learned that they
had been arrested.
Ahmine, who is representing all of the accused, said that in reaching
the guilty verdict, the judges relied only on statements by security
force agents that protesters had injured them. Ahmine said that none of
the evidence identified any defendant as directly participating in any
act of violence or property damage.
The written judgment also cites no evidence incriminating the defendants
individually. It states that 22 police officers filed complaints and
gave written testimony alleging that they were victims of protester
violence. During the June 18 hearing, judges heard three police officers
out of the 22. They described the general circumstances but did not
identify any of the accused as someone who committed a violent act.
Several of the accused admitted participating in the protest but denied
they engaged in any act of violence. In its judgment, the court cited
the evidence of violence, such as police statements and complaints,
photos of broken windows, and the prosecutor’s description of the
material damage, but without citing any evidence tying the violence to
any of the accused.
In addition, Ahmine said, police undermined the public nature of the
hearing by singling out activists and refusing to allow them into the
courtroom. The courtroom was not full, and there was no reason to
prevent the activists from attending the trial, Ahmine said.
Dhab also told EMHRN and Human Rights Watch that the police prevented him and others from entering the courtroom.
Barring selected people from the courtroom contravenes article 14 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which states that
“Everyone shall be entitled to a fair and public hearing by a
competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law.”
“Just being an activist without any evidence you committed a crime, or
even were near the scene, shouldn’t get you sentenced to prison,” said Eric Goldstein, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Nor should it get you barred from a public trial.”