Yemen: CPJ deplores government crackdown on local media

June 26, 2001

His Excellency President Ali Abdullah Saleh
c/o His Excellency Ambassador Abdul Wahab al-Hajjri
Embassy of the Republic of Yemen
2600 Virginia Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20037

VIA FACSIMILE +202-337-2017

Your Excellency:

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply concerned about government harassment of independent and opposition media in Yemen. In recent weeks, we have documented a disturbing pattern of censorship and intimidation of journalists in response to their professional work.

On June 11, the Supreme Court in the capital, Sanaa, upheld a lower court’s decision to ban the opposition weekly Al-Shoura for six months, effective immediately. The banning stemmed from a 1997 libel case brought against Al-Shoura and its former editors, the late Abdullah Saad and his brother Abdel Jabbar Saad, by Islah Party leader Abdel Majid al-Zindani

The Supreme Court also upheld Abdel Jabbar Saad’s sentence of 80 lashes and a ban on practicing journalism for one year. Saad was ordered to pay damages of 100,000 riyals (about US$625) to Sheik Abdel Majid al-Zindani.

Al-Zindani has since withdrawn his case against the two brothers, according to Al-Shoura. It is unclear what effect this will have on the Supreme Court’s ruling.

This alarming decision comes on the heels of two other grave press freedom abuses:

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