Home > News and Reports > Mauritania: Government should do more than host human rights conference
News Service 66/97
AI INDEX: AFR 38/03/97
16 APRIL 1997
MAURITANIA: GOVERNMENT SHOULD DO
MORE THAN HOST HUMAN RIGHTS CONFERENCE
The Government of Mauritania should do
more than host the African Commission on Human and Peoples´
Rights, it should comply with its obligations under the African
Charter, Amnesty International said today, as the African
Commission meets this week in Nouakchott for its 21st Ordinary
Session.
"Hosting this meeting is nothing
but an illusion that human rights is firmly on the Mauritanian
Government´s own agenda," the organization said.
"The human rights situation has in fact deteriorated over the
past three months as the authorities have increasingly sought to
silence opposition to its policies by detaining government critics
for short periods."
Even the formal opening of the
Commission´s session by the Prime Minister of Mauritania
yesterday was marred by the heavy presence of soldiers who were
trying to prevent local human rights organizations from
participating in the public opening session. The human rights
organizations were allowed in only after persistent protest from
Amnesty International and other international human rights
activists.
Since the beginning of the year at
least 27 and possibly as many as 40 government critics have been
arrested in connection with their political activities and detained
for short periods -- mostly outside the judicial process. Only six
of them were eventually charged and brought to trial. All the
others were released without charge after being detained
incommunicado for periods ranging from 24 hours to 27
days.
"Most of these people were
probably prisoners of conscience -- arrested solely because of
their political activities in an attempt by the authorities to
silence any criticism of its policies," Amnesty International
said.
At least nine government critics were
arrested on 22 January 1997 and accused of unauthorized political
links with Libya. They included leaders and members of two
opposition parties, Action
pour le Changement (ACP),
Action for Change, and Alliance populaire progressive
(APP), Peoples´ Progressive
Alliance, as well as supporters of a campaign to expose the
widespread practice of slavery in Mauritania -- a practice which
has persisted despite its abolition under Mauritanian Law since
1980. Six of them , including the leaders of ACP and AFP, were
later released without charge after being detained incommunicado
for between seven to 27 days.
On 11 March 1997, at least seven
members of the Syndicat
indépendant des professeurs du secondaire (SIPES), the Independent Union for Secondary
School Teachers, were arrested by the Direction de la Sûreté de
l'Etat, security police
after the union issued a strike notice. They were held for 24 hours
before being released without charge.
On 31 March and 1 April 1997, 11
students, including Abdallahi Ould Naha, Bitrigha Mkaber (F) and
Dah Ould Weddady, all reportedly involved in a strike at the
university of Nouakchott, were also arrested by the Direction de la Sùreté de
l' Etat and held for 24
hours before being released uncharged.
In both cases, those arrested were
publicly accused of causing " public disorder"
(troubles de l'ordre
public). However none are
known to have been charged with any offence; instead they were
reportedly banished from the capital and taken back to their home
villages where they have to report to the police station on a daily
basis. Lawyers have reportedly been informed that they cannot
appeal on behalf of their clients because they have not been
formally charged.
Amnesty International considers that
this practice amounts to a form of administrative detention and
believes that the absence of all judicial process in these cases is
a strong indication that they are probably prisoners of conscience
who have been arbitrarily detained to prevent them from conducting
their non-violent political activities.
The African Commission undertook a
mission to Mauritania in 1996 on receiving complaints of massive
and gross violations of human rights from human rights
organizations and other individuals, in particular about
imprisonment, torture and extrajudicial executions; some dating
back to the early 1990s. No report has been published.
Amnesty International calls upon the
Government of Mauritania, as a state party to the African Charter
on Human and Peoples´ Rights, to comply with its obligations
under the Charter by among other things releasing any prisoners of
conscience -- including those suffering from restriction under
banishment orders without any form of judicial process, or to
promptly charge them and bring them to trial on criminal charges
consistent with international human rights standards.
ENDS\