1156 issue: week ending 2 Apr. 2020Algiers, March 29, 2020 – An Algerian journalist was Sunday ordered to be held in pre-trial detention, press freedom group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and rights organisations said. “Our correspondent in Algeria, Khaled Drareni, has been incarcerated,” RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire wrote on Twitter. “We will fight against this […]
Algiers, March 29, 2020 – An Algerian journalist was Sunday ordered to be held in pre-trial detention, press freedom group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and rights organisations said. “Our correspondent in Algeria, Khaled Drareni, has been incarcerated,” RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire wrote on Twitter. “We will fight against this unfair and arbitrary decision,” he added.
Drareni was arrested on March 7 while covering an anti-government protest, accused of “inciting an unarmed gathering and damaging national integrity”. He was released three days later but re-arrested on Friday evening. RSF has condemned what it called the “shameless use” of the coronavirus epidemic “by the Algerian regime to settle scores with free and independent
journalism”.
Prisoners’ rights group CNLD said on Facebook that Drareni appeared Sunday before a prosecutor in an Algiers court in the presence of defence lawyers, adding that he was in good health.
Souhaieb Khayati, RSF’s North Africa chief, told AFP that Drareni was being held in the capital’s El Harrach prison under “preventive detention until a trial date has been set”. Drareni is also the founder of the Casbah Tribune website and Algeria
correspondent for international French-language channel TV5 Monde. He has been arrested several times for covering “Hirak” anti-government protests that had been held in the capital Algiers every Friday since February 2019. The demonstrations were suspended this month over the coronavirus, which has killed 29 people and infected 454 in Algeria, according to official figures.
Despite the pandemic, Algeria’s courts have carried on work, with Karim Tabbou — a key figure in the anti-government protests — sentenced to a year in prison last Tuesday. Two other journalists, Sofiane Merakchi and Belkacem Djir, are currently in jail in Algeria.
By AFP
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The military junta in Burkina Faso is not governing at ease. The country is struggling with repressive actions from the junta, with opposition figures, lawyers and activities feeling the brunt of the regime.
The Nigerien government revoked the operating permit for the Imouraren uranium mine from the French company Orano to assert sovereignty over its resources.
There is news coverage in Spain about Morocco stepping up its military presence near the Spanish-controlled enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla, and a lot of chatter about a Russian military presence in Tunisia.
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