Al Ghannoushi: Latest Releases No Sign of Tunisian Rights 
Improvement


            IkhwanWeb - Tunisia







            Saturday, July 28, 2007
            Rashed Al Ghannoushi, the head of the Tunisian Al Nahda Islamic 
movement confirmed that the latest releases carried out on Thursday, July, 
26th, 2007, add nothing new to the Tunisian political status quo and that they 
don"t refer to any respect to human rights or political reform in Tunisia.

            Al Ghannoushi pointed out that the release wording can be called a 
conditional release. That is, any decision from the Minister of Interior return 
this prisoner back to prison to complete his previous sentence. More over, any 
released prisoner is subjected to 5 year administrative probation after leaving 
prison .

            " It is true that 23 leaders of Al-Nahda Renaissance Movement have 
been released. Other leaders and members were released during the past 15 
years. They are a part of about 30000 members who were detained in the early 
1990s, after facing a military tribunal. They received varied sentences. 
Therefore, sentences of some of them end and they are released from time to 
time. Only some dozens of Al Nahda leaders are still in prison", said Al 
Ghannoushi.


             " However, the latest releases are only security measures, not as 
part of a political plan for openness to Al-Nahda Movement or any other 
opposition movement. They are only a kind of a few vents under pressures from 
humanitarian organizations and liberal powers inside and outside the country.

            Al Ghannoushi pointed out that the release wording can be called a 
conditional release. That is, any decision from the Minister of Interior return 
this prisoner back to prison to complete his previous sentence. More over, any 
released prisoner is subjected to 5 year administrative probation after leaving 
prison. The released prisoner had to show up at police stations evey now and 
then. He is also prevented from moving from one place to another without a 
security permit. He is banned from having a passport, denied state jobs. These 
released prisoners are denied many rights given to ordinary citizens."

            Al Ghannoushi adds "Therefore, we see such measures as only moving 
from a narrow prison to a wider prison. These releases don"t address our 
demands and those of the Tunisian opposition. We demand more overhaul in all 
fields, especially in politics. We demand a comprehensive political reform that 
lifts restrictions on freedom of speech and freedom of establishing societies 
and parties, and help the country move from a police system to an open 
democratic system."

             "This release does not reflect a breakthrough in the human rights 
situation. They only reflect a little submission to many pressures from various 
parties."

            It is worth mentioning that Tunisian opposition lawyer, Mohamed 
Abou, was released afted he was sentenced to two and a half years  for writing 
articles comparing Tunisian prisons with those of Abu Ghraib Prison in Iraq. He 
wrote many other opposing article. He was released last Tuesday after French 
President Sarkozy hinted at him during his latest visit to France.
            Al Ghannoushi said that Mohamed Abou was jailed because of his 
exercising freedom of speech and he drew a comparison between prisons. He drew 
a comparison between the character of Sharon when he was invited to visit 
Tunisia to attend the international media conference, with that of Bin Ali.

            Mohamed Abou and his family faced frightening threats. Domestic and 
foreign organizations were founded to defend him, may be because he is a 
well-known lawyer. These organizations exercised many pressures, the latest of 
which was Sarkozy"s during his visit to Tunis as he raised the issue of 
detaining Mohamed Abou.


            Thus, the Tunisian regime was obliged to free him. The measures 
that took place during the last fifteen years weren’t a part of a political 
reform project. They are denied many rights. These means we are still miles 
away from serius political overhaul in the country.

            Al Ghannoushi said:" There is still the target for which the 
Tunisian opposition is struggling, definitely through peaceful pressures: 
freeing the country from the fetters of the police-controlled regime, and free 
the political life from terrorism exercised by the police against people to 
realize a democracy based on citizenship, human rights and the democratic 
practice of the political life."



      http://www.ikhwanweb.com/Article.asp?ID=1078&LevelID=2&SectionID=0

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