Blogger Azyz Amamy was arrested on January 7, according to local journalists. Another Tunisian blogger, whose family requested that international organizations not publicize his name and other identifying information, was arrested the same day, according to news reports. A local journalist told CPJ that they are both being held in Mornaguia Prison, near Tunis. Nizar Ben Hasan, a correspondent for Radio Kalima in the coastal town of Chebba, was detained on Tuesday afternoon. He was taken from his house by presidential security forces, according to Radio Kalima. Ben Hasan was extensively covering street protests in Chebba for the station, his colleague Mouldi Zouabi told CPJ.
On Monday, Soufiane Chourabi, a reporter working for the opposition weekly Al-Tariq al-Jadid, had security agents confiscate his camera while he was covering a demonstration in downtown Tunis.
Isabelle Mandraud, a journalist working for the French daily Le Monde, was denied entry to Tunisia, the paper reported on January 7.
“We call on the Tunisian authorities to immediately release all detained reporters and bloggers,” said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ’s Middle East and North Africa program coordinator. “We also urge Tunis to grant foreign reporters access and to end its routine harassment of journalists who are trying to cover unrest.”
According to CPJ’s analysis, the country’s state-owned Internet bandwidth provider, the Tunisian Internet Agency has been spying on and interfering with its customers’ access to private e-mail and social networking sites, including Facebook, Gmail, and Yahoo. Individuals have reported that these sites’ pages have either been blocked entirely, or been manipulated to include malicious code that collects private usernames and passwords and then relays them to the agency. The accounts of bloggers and journalists have subsequently been broken into using these stolen credentials, and content and accounts deleted, including Facebook pages administrated by local journalists as well as the account of local online video journalist Haythem El Mekki.
“Tunisia, which always had a poor online press freedom record, has now become the undisputed leader of online repression in the region,” said CPJ Internet Advocacy Coordinator Danny O’Brien.
Tunisia has witnessed spreading street protests against unemployment and corruption since mid-December. The protests were triggered when an unemployed university graduate, Mohamed Bouazizi, set himself on fire after police dismantled his illegal fruit-vending stand, the only source of income for his family. On January 11, Tunisian authorities announced the closure of schools and universities amid deadly clashes between police, military, and protesters, according to news reports. Tunisian Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi announced today that the authorities will release all those who were arrested during demonstrations at an unspecified date.
On Monday, members of the Tunisian Journalists Syndicate held a demonstration in Tunis in which journalists criticized both public and private media’s coverage of the unrest. Tunisian journalists released a statement protesting the “continuation of using national media, both public and private, as a mouthpiece for propaganda, falsification, blackouts, and justification for the repression, oppression, and killings against our people.”