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Zaki Bani Irsheid Sentenced by Jordanian Court
18 Months in Prison for Criticizing UAE
a Human Rights Watch Statement
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 20, 2015
Jordan: 18 Months for Criticizing UAE Despite Government Promises,
Free Expression in Peril
(Beirut, February 19, 2015) –
Jordan’s
State Security Court sentenced a senior opposition figure on February 15,
2015, to 18 months in prison for criticizing the United Arab Emirates (UAE),
Human Rights Watch said today. The court convicted Zaki Bani Irsheid, a
senior Muslim Brotherhood official, under Jordan’s terrorism law, which
lawmakers amended in 2014 to include a provision that criminalizes
“disturbing [Jordan’s] relations with a foreign state.”
The
prosecution was based on a November 15, 2014, Facebook post, in which Bani
Irsheid criticized
UAE authorities for classifying the Muslim Brotherhood as a “terrorist
organization.” Jordanian authorities defended the prosecution as an unbiased
application of the law. Bani Irsheid has been held in Amman’s Marka prison
since his arrest on November 20.
“Jordanian officials will say they
gave Bani Irsheid due process, but it’s the law itself which is inherently
unjust,” said
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. “Jordan should stop using its terrorism law to persecute its
own citizens just because they criticize foreign leaders.”
“Disturbing [Jordan’s] relations with a foreign state” has been a crime
under Jordan’s penal code for many years. Jordanian prosecutors have used it
to prosecute Jordanians for speech critical of foreign rulers. The State
Security Court reform law, passed earlier in 2014, removed this charge from
the jurisdiction of the court, but in April, lawmakers reversed the reform
by adding the provision to the country’s terrorism law, thereby putting the
charge back under State Security Court jurisdiction as a terrorism charge.
Jordan’s 2011 constitution enshrined in law the right of every Jordanian
to “freely expression his opinion” in speech or writing, but lawmakers have
failed to abolish legislation and stop prosecutions that violate the free
speech rights of the country’s citizens.
Bani Irsheid’s Facebook post
in question does not call for violence. It accuses the UAE of collusion with
Israel and calls for the UAE to be expelled from the Gulf Cooperation
Council, Arab League, and Organization of Islamic Cooperation. It says
Emirates undertakes the role of “American policeman,” stands behind all acts
of terrorism against the Arab nation, and supports coups and Westernization
movements.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour
defended Bani Irsheid’s prosecution as punishing “defamation” against
the UAE, stating that Bani Irsheid “should have read the law before making
the post.” Another cabinet member told the
Jordan Times that Bani Irsheid cannot be considered a “political prisoner”
because “[i]t is only when people are arrested for their opinions that they
are called ‘political prisoners.’ This has never been the case in Jordan.”
Bani Irsheid’s conviction is part of a broader
clampdown in recent months on Jordanians who criticize foreign leaders
or Jordanian officials, either on social media or during protest marches and
demonstrations. In other recent speech-related prosecutions before the State
Security Court that Human Rights Watch has reviewed, judges generally
convicted defendants to time served in pretrial detention or imposed
sentences of three months or less, which can be replaced by a fine.
Bani Irsheid’s 18-month sentence signals that Jordan has no commitment to
its promises to end convictions for free expression, Human Rights Watch
said. According to Reuters, Bani Irsheid is the highest-profile political
figure to be
imprisoned in Jordan since 1995.
Neighboring Gulf Cooperation
Council countries pledged in 2011 to provide Jordan with US$5 billion in
development aid, including $1.25
billion from the UAE.
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on
Jordan, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/jordan
For more
information, please contact: In New York, Adam Coogle (English, Arabic):
+1-646-404-1475 (mobile); or
[email protected]. Follow on Twitter @cooglea In New York, Sarah Leah
Whitson (English): +1-718-362-0172 (mobile); or
[email protected]. Follow on Twitter
@sarahleah1
***
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