• Regime pursues defamation cases in Morocco and other countries.
• Qaddafi nationalizes the nation’s sole private television station.
3: Moroccan newspaper ordered to pay damages for “injuring the dignity” of Col. Muammar Qaddafi.
Col. Muammar Qaddafi marked in September the 40th anniversary of the coup that brought him to power and led to the eradication of human rights and the assassination and enforced disappearance of hundreds of critics, including journalists. The government has used softer tactics of repression in recent years in keeping with its efforts to rehabilitate Qaddafi’s international image, but it has maintained a tight grip on the news media.
ATTACKS ON
THE PRESS: 2009
• Main Index
MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA
• Regional Analysis:
Human rights coverage spreads despite government pushback
Country Summaries
• Bahrain
• Egypt
• Iran
• Iraq
• Israel, Occupied Palestinian Territories
• Libya
• Morocco
• Sudan
• Tunisia
• Yemen
• Other developments
“They’ve realized that
routinely harassing journalists … achieves the same goal without causing any
public outcry,” said Omar al-Keddi, a Radio Netherlands journalist and a Libyan
who was forced into exile 10 years ago. Al-Jazeera and human rights defenders
cited a spate of defamation cases filed in early year by the office of the
press prosecutor, an agency assigned specifically to investigate purported news
media offenses. Although no journalist was in prison in late year, harassment
appeared to be the government’s strategy. CPJ sources said the prosecutor’s
office has made a practice of summoning journalists for questioning multiple
times, often forcing them to travel many miles on short notice. In February, more than 60 academics and journalists joined in a
petition denouncing the “judicial harassment,” news reports said.
The regime continued to be
aggressive in pursuing prosecutions of critical journalists based in other
autocratic countries. In the spring, the Libyan Embassy in
In June, a Casablanca
court ordered Al-Massae, Al-Jarida
al-Oula, and Al-Ahdath al-Maghrebia each to pay fines of 100,000 dirhams
(US$12,500) and damages of 1 million dirhams (US$125,200) for “injuring the
dignity” of the Libyan leader. Moroccan courts are noted for a lack of
independence and a susceptibility to political influence, CPJ research shows.
Qaddafi’s support of
The verdict prompted
outrage among press and human rights groups. “This was a freedom of opinion
case,” one defense lawyer, Hassan Semlali, told CPJ. “There is no defamation at
all. Qaddafi used all of his weight to muzzle three dailies at the same time.”
Qaddafi’s intolerance of
any level of critical journalism was reflected by the regime’s sudden decision
in April to nationalize the Al-Ghad media group, which had launched Al-Libiya,
the country’s first private television station. Established in 2007 by
Qaddafi’s son, Sayf al-Islam, the Al-Ghad group also encompassed the newspapers
Oea and
State-run media gave no
reason for the decision, but independent news outlets said the satellite
broadcaster Al-Libiya was about to air a report on the regime’s use of torture
and its persecution of dissidents. Egyptian authorities had also complained
about critical on-air remarks made by commentator Hamdi Kandil, journalists
told CPJ. Al-Libiya and the two radio stations were brought under the state-run
Jamahiriya Broadcasting Corporation and the two dailies under the Public Press
Foundation.
Creation of the Al-Ghad
media outlets was initially seen as a public relations ploy intended to improve
the regime’s global image and promote Sayf al-Islam Qaddafi as a reformer. But
the outlets hired professional and independent-minded journalists and tackled
important (and otherwise ignored) social issues in critical ways. Libyan journalists
said the Al-Ghad outlets appeared to have had support among reform-minded
people in the regime, but were ultimately toppled by the reactionary elements
that have long urged iron-fisted press policies. Al-Ghad journalists were among
those summoned for interrogation by government prosecutors, according to the
Libyan League for Human Rights, a group of exiled academics and writers.
OpenNet Initiative, an
academic collaboration that studies online censorship, said the regime conducts
selective filtering of online political content. In a report published in
August 2009, OpenNet also noted that “a number of independent and
pro-opposition Web sites were found to be sporadically hacked and defaced, and
their content replaced with pro-Libyan leader content.” Blogs were few in
number and tended to focus on culture and literature rather than politics,
OpenNet said.
The Libyan League for
Human Rights offered an important reminder of the regime’s brutally repressive
history. On World Press Freedom Day, the organization released a list of
reporters who had been murdered or who had disappeared over the past four
decades. The list of “journalists who lost their lives for ethically doing
their job” included Daif al-Gahzal al-Shuhaibi. His disfigured body was found in
the suburbs of Benghazi on June 2, 2005, about two weeks after he was reported
missing, according to several sources. A former state media employee, he had
recently begun writing online articles describing official corruption. To date,
no credible and transparent inquiry into al-Ghazal’s death has been conducted.
In July 2007, news reports quoted al-Ghazal’s family as saying that a

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