2000 Annual Report for Mauritania
Mauritania
Islamic Republic of
Mauritania
Head of state: Maaouiya Ould Sid
'Ahmed Taya
Head of government: Cheikh El Avia Ould
Mohamed Khouna
Capital: Nouakchott
Population: 2.3 million
Official language: Arabic
Death penalty:
retentionist
Press freedom and the activities of
human rights groups continued to be severely curtailed, making
information about human rights difficult to obtain. The Mauritanian
authorities took no steps to investigate massive human rights
violations committed during the late 1980s and early 1990s, but the
French judicial authorities arrested and investigated a Mauritanian
army officer in France accused of torture.
Background
Human rights violations, including
political killings, "disappearances" and torture, were
widespread during the late 1980s and early 1990s. The victims
included suspected government opponents from both black and
Arab-Berber communities, civil servants and farmers and cattle
herders from the south. Between 1989 and 1991 black African
villagers, particularly those from the Senegal River Valley, were
targeted by the Mauritanian authorities, dominated by Moors and
members of the Beidane ethnic group. More than 500 black
Mauritanians held in military custody in 1990 and 1991 were
allegedly the victims of extrajudicial execution. A variety of
torture techniques were used, including electric shocks, burning
with hot coals and the "jaguar", which involved
suspending the victim upside down from a metal bar and beating the
soles of the feet. Tens of thousands of mostly black Mauritanians
were expelled or fled to Senegal and other neighbouring countries.
The Mauritanian authorities continued to prevent investigations
into past human rights violations.
Human rights organizations continued to
operate without recognition by the government, leaving human rights
activists open to harassment for "administer[ing] associations
which are functioning without authorization" according to
Mauritanian law. In 1998, a number of prominent human rights
defenders were arrested, tried, convicted and sentenced to prison
terms under this law.
In October, after Mauritania
established full diplomatic ties with Israel, student protests in
Nouakchott and in other towns were dispersed by police. Further
student protests in November led to the brief arrest of more than a
dozen people. A few days later, Mauritanian authorities also banned
the opposition Taliaa
( Vanguard) Party, accusing
party leaders of stirring up the unrest. Police detained an
official of the Iraqi Ba'th Party, releasing him shortly
afterwards but retaining his passport.
Prisoners of conscience
Three opposition activists were held
without charge or trial for more than one month. They were: Ahmed
Ould Daddah, President of Le
Front des Partis d'Opposition (FPO), Opposition Parties Front, an umbrella group of
opposition parties, and Secretary General of l'Union des Forces
Démocratiques-Ere Nouvelle (UFD-EN), Union of Democratic Forces-New Era, one of
the four parties that make up the FPO; Mohameden Ould Babah, a
member of the UFD-EN executive bureau; and Maître Mohameden
Ould Ichiddou, a human rights lawyer and a UFD-EN
supporter.
The three men were arrested on 16
December 1998 in Nouakchott, apparently after allegations were made
at an FPO meeting that the government was planning to accept
Israeli nuclear waste for dumping. This allegation had appeared
earlier in the Moroccan press. The following day the Minister of
the Interior announced that they were to be charged with
"attacking the national interest and the country's
reputation by making baseless accusations". However, no
charges were brought.
The three men were held under armed
guard in the town of Boumdeid, more than 500 kilometres from the
capital. They were reportedly confined in a room so small that they
could not all lie down at the same time. Between 16 December 1998
and 3 January 1999 they were allowed out to exercise only once.
After 17 days in incommunicado detention, they were each allowed a
visit by one family member, but continued to be denied access to
lawyers and the news media.
There were numerous demonstrations in
Nouakchott, demanding the release of the three prisoners, which
were violently suppressed by the security forces, who reportedly
injured several women. The three men were released on 17 January,
the end of Ramadan. In March they were tried and acquitted of
charges of inciting intolerance and acts likely to breach public
order.
International action against
impunity
In July, Ely Ould Dah, a Mauritanian
army officer, was arrested in Montpellier, southern France, for
alleged crimes of torture. He was approached by the French
authorities while attending a course run by the French army at a
military school in Montpellier, and was detained and questioned by
judicial authorities in Montpellier. In September, a French court
ordered his provisional release, but required Ely Ould Dah to stay
in the region until the completion of the investigation into
torture charges.
The authorities intervened after human
rights organizations, including the Fédération internationale des droits de
l'homme (FIDH),
International Federation of Human Rights, and the Ligue des droits de l'homme
(LDH), League of Human Rights, put
forward a formal complaint to the police authorities in
Montpellier. Ely Ould Dah was accused of having tortured at least
two people in a prison near Nouakchott in 1990 and 1991. The two
alleged victims were cooperating with the judicial
authorities.
AI welcomed the investigation as a
positive step in ensuring justice for the victims of gross human
rights abuses committed in Mauritania over the years, and urged the
French authorities to consider investigating any Mauritanian
official against whom there might be allegations of serious human
rights violations and who entered their jurisdiction.
A similar case to the one brought
against Ely Ould Dah was earlier brought to the attention of the
judicial authorities in Paris. However in that case, Ould Hmeid
Salem – a Mauritanian army officer receiving specialist
medical care in Paris – was informed of the initiative by the
French judicial authorities and fled to the Canary Islands. The
French tribunals had declared themselves competent to hear Ould
Hmeid Salem's case on the basis of the UN Convention against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment.
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