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	<title>Restricciones a la libertad de circulación &#8211; The Observatory For Defenders</title>
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	<title>Restricciones a la libertad de circulación &#8211; The Observatory For Defenders</title>
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		<title>Net Rights Coalition, 132 other Digital Rights Stakeholders endorse statement condemning the Government of Zambia&#8217;s Abrupt Disruption of RightsCon</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/net-rights-coalition-132-other-digital-rights-stakeholders-endorse-statement-condemning-the-government-of-zambias-abrupt-disruption-of-rightscon/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 11:04:07 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=24674</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>Thursday, April 30, 2026: We, the <a href="https://paradigmhq.org/net-rights-coalition/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899507">Net Rights Coalition</a> (NRC), a network of digital rights actors, and all other signatories listed below, are appalled by the Government of Zambia’s unilateral announcement of the postponement of RightsCon on 29 April 2026, a move that has resulted in the cancellation of the global event with over 5000 participants that was going to be hosted in Sub-Saharan Africa for the first time. Access Now, partners, and thousands of stakeholders have incurred huge financial and logistical losses as plans were underway for the event to start in 3 days. Zambia will also record significant economic losses that would have come from thousands of visitors to a nation that prides itself as a tourist destination, anchored on the popular <em>Zambia KuChalo </em>(Zambia to the World) slogan. This will have a huge impact on Zambian small businesses that were engaged to provide services that will now be cancelled.</strong>

The need for international consensus-building remains critical, and the government of Zambia missed an opportunity to demonstrate a strong commitment to preserving the multistakeholder model, a key feature of global digital governance, across its country's digital rights engagements. Rather, the government cited the need for comprehensive disclosures to align with “national values, policy priorities, and broader public-interest considerations”, but did not disclose them to the public to ease understanding of such a drastic action.

The position comes after the Ministry of Technology and Science, on 3 March 2026, officially <a href="https://www.mots.gov.zm/?p=6792" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899508">announced</a> that they were the primary Government partner for RightsCon 2026, with the event meant to be held in Lusaka, Zambia and online from 5 to 8 May 2026. This government statement assured the global community that the event would proceed with the host government's appropriate support. The backtracking, at the last minute, on this commitment raises questions about trust and commitment to civil society engagement and international agreements, to which Zambia has in the past demonstrated a strong pledge. This action, when travel itineraries are set, accommodation is booked, and venue costs are incurred, constitutes a setback to global human and digital rights processes and derails the participation of diverse stakeholders, including civil society, government, investors, and the private sector engaged in these conversations.

The suspended event agenda presents areas of discourse on key digital economy topics, promotes digital rights and embeds multistakeholderism, as outlined in the <a href="https://www.un.org/digital-emerging-technologies/global-digital-compact" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899509">Global Digital Compact</a> (GDC), adopted in 2024, to which Zambia contributed as Co-Chair, having been <a href="https://www.un.org/digital-emerging-technologies/global-digital-compact/intergovernmental-process" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899510">appointed</a> on 10 October 2023 by the President of the General Assembly, together with Sweden, to lead the intergovernmental process on the Global Digital Compact.

RightsCon in Lusaka would have been an incredible opportunity for local and global exchange, and to create new initiatives to realise human rights in the digital age. A clear channel of resolving any outstanding issues with the event convenor to save the multistakeholder approach would have been a fair course of action, aligned with international human rights standards to which Zambia subscribes as a State party, such as the<a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-civil-and-political-rights" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899511"> International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights </a>and the <a href="https://au.int/en/treaties/african-charter-human-and-peoples-rights" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899512">African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights</a>.

We condemn the government's actions that led to the cancellation of RightsCon in Zambia. This raises concerns about closing civic space and fostering a culture of self-censorship ahead of the August 2026 elections, and is a major setback for Zambia’s digital rights trajectory regionally and globally, signalling a departure from the gains it has secured in leading global processes.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>Thursday, April 30, 2026: We, the <a href="https://paradigmhq.org/net-rights-coalition/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899507">Net Rights Coalition</a> (NRC), a network of digital rights actors, and all other signatories listed below, are appalled by the Government of Zambia’s unilateral announcement of the postponement of RightsCon on 29 April 2026, a move that has resulted in the cancellation of the global event with over 5000 participants that was going to be hosted in Sub-Saharan Africa for the first time. Access Now, partners, and thousands of stakeholders have incurred huge financial and logistical losses as plans were underway for the event to start in 3 days. Zambia will also record significant economic losses that would have come from thousands of visitors to a nation that prides itself as a tourist destination, anchored on the popular <em>Zambia KuChalo </em>(Zambia to the World) slogan. This will have a huge impact on Zambian small businesses that were engaged to provide services that will now be cancelled.</strong>

The need for international consensus-building remains critical, and the government of Zambia missed an opportunity to demonstrate a strong commitment to preserving the multistakeholder model, a key feature of global digital governance, across its country's digital rights engagements. Rather, the government cited the need for comprehensive disclosures to align with “national values, policy priorities, and broader public-interest considerations”, but did not disclose them to the public to ease understanding of such a drastic action.

The position comes after the Ministry of Technology and Science, on 3 March 2026, officially <a href="https://www.mots.gov.zm/?p=6792" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899508">announced</a> that they were the primary Government partner for RightsCon 2026, with the event meant to be held in Lusaka, Zambia and online from 5 to 8 May 2026. This government statement assured the global community that the event would proceed with the host government's appropriate support. The backtracking, at the last minute, on this commitment raises questions about trust and commitment to civil society engagement and international agreements, to which Zambia has in the past demonstrated a strong pledge. This action, when travel itineraries are set, accommodation is booked, and venue costs are incurred, constitutes a setback to global human and digital rights processes and derails the participation of diverse stakeholders, including civil society, government, investors, and the private sector engaged in these conversations.

The suspended event agenda presents areas of discourse on key digital economy topics, promotes digital rights and embeds multistakeholderism, as outlined in the <a href="https://www.un.org/digital-emerging-technologies/global-digital-compact" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899509">Global Digital Compact</a> (GDC), adopted in 2024, to which Zambia contributed as Co-Chair, having been <a href="https://www.un.org/digital-emerging-technologies/global-digital-compact/intergovernmental-process" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899510">appointed</a> on 10 October 2023 by the President of the General Assembly, together with Sweden, to lead the intergovernmental process on the Global Digital Compact.

RightsCon in Lusaka would have been an incredible opportunity for local and global exchange, and to create new initiatives to realise human rights in the digital age. A clear channel of resolving any outstanding issues with the event convenor to save the multistakeholder approach would have been a fair course of action, aligned with international human rights standards to which Zambia subscribes as a State party, such as the<a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/international-covenant-civil-and-political-rights" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899511"> International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights </a>and the <a href="https://au.int/en/treaties/african-charter-human-and-peoples-rights" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1537899512">African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights</a>.

We condemn the government's actions that led to the cancellation of RightsCon in Zambia. This raises concerns about closing civic space and fostering a culture of self-censorship ahead of the August 2026 elections, and is a major setback for Zambia’s digital rights trajectory regionally and globally, signalling a departure from the gains it has secured in leading global processes.]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Forced Return of Afgan Sadigov to Azerbaijan: A Test of the Council of Europe&#8217;s Credibility</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/the-forced-return-of-afgan-sadigov-to-azerbaijan-a-test-of-the-council-of-europes-credibility/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2026 16:08:18 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=24651</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>Mr Alain Berset</strong>
Secretary General of the Council of Europe
Palais de l’Europe
Strasbourg
20 April 2026

<strong>Re.: </strong>The Forced Return of Afgan Sadigov to Azerbaijan: A Test of the Council of Europe's Credibility

Mr Secretary General,

We, the undersigned human rights organisations, write to bring to your urgent attention <a href="https://free-anar.site/afgan-sadigov-georgia-must-account-for-his-forced-return-to-azerbaijan/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169016">the forced return of journalist Afgan Sadigov</a> to Azerbaijan and the broader pattern of transnational repression it reflects. This pattern is increasingly manifesting across the South Caucasus, as illustrated by the systemic and documented <a href="https://odihr.osce.org/sites/default/files/documents/official_documents/2026/03/odgal0009c1%20ODIHR%20NV%2082-2026%20report_Moscow%20Mechanism%20invoked%20in%20respect%20of%20Georgia_0.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169017">deterioration of human rights and the civil society landscape</a> in Georgia. Crucially, in January 2025, the European Court of Human Rights issued a binding interim measure prohibiting Georgia of his extradition after he was arrested there in August 2024 on an Azerbaijani extradition request.

The case of Afgan Sadigov is especially emblematic, and underscores the long-standing concerns of <a href="https://www.hrw.org/news/2026/02/10/azerbaijan-expands-crackdown-on-activists-in-exile" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169018">international human rights</a> organisations about the <a href="https://www.freedom-now.org/report-repression-beyond-borders-exiled-azerbaijanis-in-georgia/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169019">transnational repression of Azerbaijani dissent</a>.

On 5 April 2026, Afgan Sadigov, founder and editor of the regional news site Azel.tv, <a href="https://europeanjournalists.org/blog/2026/04/08/georgia-sadygovs-deportation-is-a-stark-example-of-transnational-repression-against-journalists-in-europe/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169020">was deported to Azerbaijan</a> within hours of his late-night arrest in Tbilisi on alleged administrative grounds: that <a href="https://www.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122173197854862924&amp;id=61575887721285&amp;mibextid=wwXIfr&amp;rdid=7ozn8uA7j5qCdsHk" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169021">a social media post</a> constituted an assault on a police officer. Sadigov had faced repeated criminal and administrative persecution in Azerbaijan for his criticism of the authorities before relocating to Georgia in 2023. After his arrest in August 2024 on an Azerbaijani extradition request, and following the interim measure issued by the European Court of Human Rights in January 2025, he was released on bail in April 2025. In the months that followed, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1418875856940681&amp;id=100064548410237&amp;mibextid=wwXIfr&amp;rdid=MEOVVOx78duKf3YE" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169022">he and his legal team</a> sought authorisation for him to leave Georgia and reunite with his family in a third country. His request was never granted, in a context where the timing of subsequent actions suggests <a href="https://socialjustice.org.ge/en/products/afgan-sadigovis-azerbaijanshi-gadzevebit-sakartvelom-adamianis-uflebata-evropuli-sasamartlos-gadatsqvetileba-daarghvia" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169023">a coordinated sequence culminating</a> in his detention and deportation on 5 April 2026.

As of 10 April 2026, the European Court of Human Rights <a href="https://socialjustice.org.ge/ka/products/afgan-sadigovis-sakmeze-sotsialuri-samartlianobis-tsentri-evropul-sasamartlostan-uakhlesi-komunikatsiis-detalebs-akveqnebs" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169024">has invited further observations in Sadigov’s case</a>, including on whether the applicant’s transfer to Azerbaijan in disregard of an interim measure violated Article 34; the matter remains under consideration.

<a href="https://socialjustice.org.ge/en/products/afgan-sadigovis-azerbaijanshi-gadzevebit-sakartvelom-adamianis-uflebata-evropuli-sasamartlos-gadatsqvetileba-daarghvia" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169025">Sadigov’s expulsion through administrative proceedings,</a> after the extradition route had been blocked by the Court, raises serious concerns of refoulement and, in substance, extraordinary rendition, <a href="https://info.imedi.ge/en/justice/9177/georgian-interior-ministry-afgan-sadigov-deported-to-azerbaijan-banned-from-entering-georgia-for-three-years" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169026">irrespective of the formal legal classification</a> Georgia has chosen to apply.

Sadigov’s case reflects a pattern of collusion between Georgia and Azerbaijan in the suppression of dissent. Georgia’s recently enacted legislation targeting foreign funding mirrors Azerbaijan’s tactics for suppressing independent civil society. The visit of President Aliyev to Tbilisi on 6 April — <a href="https://www.occrp.org/en/news/georgia-deports-azerbaijani-journalist-bypassing-european-court-ruling" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169027">the day after Sadigov’s forced return</a> — reinforces concerns about <a href="https://info.imedi.ge/en/foreigpolicy/9179/georgian-fm-ilham-aliyevs-visit-to-georgia-holds-major-importance-for-bilateral-relations" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169028">deliberate bilateral coordination</a> aimed at restricting human rights and fundamental freedoms, in direct contradiction with both states’ obligations as Council of Europe member states.

The credibility of the European human rights system depends not only on the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, but on their effective implementation and on the collective commitment of member states to uphold the Convention.

We therefore call on you to act urgently and to use the tools available to your office:
<ul>
 	<li><strong>Invoke Article 52 of the European Convention on Human Rights </strong>to request that Azerbaijan furnish an explanation of the manner in which its domestic law ensures the effective implementation of the Convention, in light of a decade of documented and systematic violations, including the transnational repression of its own citizens on the territory of fellow member states;</li>
 	<li><strong>Commission an independent report </strong>on Georgia's conduct in the Sadigov case to be presented to the Council of Europe, examining whether Georgia's expulsion of Afgan Sadigov — carried out in direct defiance of a binding interim measure of the European Court of Human Rights — is compatible with its obligations under the Convention;</li>
 	<li><strong>Appoint a Special Representative on the South Caucasus</strong> to ensure a sustained, coordinated political and diplomatic response to the cross-border suppression of dissent — a phenomenon that existing mechanisms have demonstrably failed to address.</li>
 	<li><strong>Call on Council of Europe member States to make use of available diplomatic, political, and other appropriate measures </strong>to support the protection of Afgan Sadigov, including by facilitating his right to family reunification, particularly in light of the fact that he has already been summoned twice by the authorities since his return to Baku.</li>
</ul>
As you know, the case of Afgan Sadigov <a href="https://cpj.org/2026/01/azerbaijan-sentences-exiled-journalists-to-lengthy-prison-terms-in-absentia/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169029">does not stand alone</a>. It is the latest episode in a decade of documented, systematic repression by Azerbaijan — repression repeatedly condemned by human rights organisations and the European Court of Human Rights, including through multiple judgements finding a violation of Article 18 of the Convention, yet met with a measured and conciliatory response from the Organisation’s leadership. This has carried implications: it has emboldened Azerbaijan to expand its repression beyond its own borders and lowered the threshold for what other member states consider acceptable. Georgia's conduct in the Sadigov case is a direct expression of that lowered threshold. The credibility of the European human rights system is now at stake.

We remain at your disposal and look forward to your response.

Yours faithfully,]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>Mr Alain Berset</strong>
Secretary General of the Council of Europe
Palais de l’Europe
Strasbourg
20 April 2026

<strong>Re.: </strong>The Forced Return of Afgan Sadigov to Azerbaijan: A Test of the Council of Europe's Credibility

Mr Secretary General,

We, the undersigned human rights organisations, write to bring to your urgent attention <a href="https://free-anar.site/afgan-sadigov-georgia-must-account-for-his-forced-return-to-azerbaijan/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169016">the forced return of journalist Afgan Sadigov</a> to Azerbaijan and the broader pattern of transnational repression it reflects. This pattern is increasingly manifesting across the South Caucasus, as illustrated by the systemic and documented <a href="https://odihr.osce.org/sites/default/files/documents/official_documents/2026/03/odgal0009c1%20ODIHR%20NV%2082-2026%20report_Moscow%20Mechanism%20invoked%20in%20respect%20of%20Georgia_0.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169017">deterioration of human rights and the civil society landscape</a> in Georgia. Crucially, in January 2025, the European Court of Human Rights issued a binding interim measure prohibiting Georgia of his extradition after he was arrested there in August 2024 on an Azerbaijani extradition request.

The case of Afgan Sadigov is especially emblematic, and underscores the long-standing concerns of <a href="https://www.hrw.org/news/2026/02/10/azerbaijan-expands-crackdown-on-activists-in-exile" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169018">international human rights</a> organisations about the <a href="https://www.freedom-now.org/report-repression-beyond-borders-exiled-azerbaijanis-in-georgia/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169019">transnational repression of Azerbaijani dissent</a>.

On 5 April 2026, Afgan Sadigov, founder and editor of the regional news site Azel.tv, <a href="https://europeanjournalists.org/blog/2026/04/08/georgia-sadygovs-deportation-is-a-stark-example-of-transnational-repression-against-journalists-in-europe/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169020">was deported to Azerbaijan</a> within hours of his late-night arrest in Tbilisi on alleged administrative grounds: that <a href="https://www.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122173197854862924&amp;id=61575887721285&amp;mibextid=wwXIfr&amp;rdid=7ozn8uA7j5qCdsHk" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169021">a social media post</a> constituted an assault on a police officer. Sadigov had faced repeated criminal and administrative persecution in Azerbaijan for his criticism of the authorities before relocating to Georgia in 2023. After his arrest in August 2024 on an Azerbaijani extradition request, and following the interim measure issued by the European Court of Human Rights in January 2025, he was released on bail in April 2025. In the months that followed, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1418875856940681&amp;id=100064548410237&amp;mibextid=wwXIfr&amp;rdid=MEOVVOx78duKf3YE" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169022">he and his legal team</a> sought authorisation for him to leave Georgia and reunite with his family in a third country. His request was never granted, in a context where the timing of subsequent actions suggests <a href="https://socialjustice.org.ge/en/products/afgan-sadigovis-azerbaijanshi-gadzevebit-sakartvelom-adamianis-uflebata-evropuli-sasamartlos-gadatsqvetileba-daarghvia" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169023">a coordinated sequence culminating</a> in his detention and deportation on 5 April 2026.

As of 10 April 2026, the European Court of Human Rights <a href="https://socialjustice.org.ge/ka/products/afgan-sadigovis-sakmeze-sotsialuri-samartlianobis-tsentri-evropul-sasamartlostan-uakhlesi-komunikatsiis-detalebs-akveqnebs" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169024">has invited further observations in Sadigov’s case</a>, including on whether the applicant’s transfer to Azerbaijan in disregard of an interim measure violated Article 34; the matter remains under consideration.

<a href="https://socialjustice.org.ge/en/products/afgan-sadigovis-azerbaijanshi-gadzevebit-sakartvelom-adamianis-uflebata-evropuli-sasamartlos-gadatsqvetileba-daarghvia" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169025">Sadigov’s expulsion through administrative proceedings,</a> after the extradition route had been blocked by the Court, raises serious concerns of refoulement and, in substance, extraordinary rendition, <a href="https://info.imedi.ge/en/justice/9177/georgian-interior-ministry-afgan-sadigov-deported-to-azerbaijan-banned-from-entering-georgia-for-three-years" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169026">irrespective of the formal legal classification</a> Georgia has chosen to apply.

Sadigov’s case reflects a pattern of collusion between Georgia and Azerbaijan in the suppression of dissent. Georgia’s recently enacted legislation targeting foreign funding mirrors Azerbaijan’s tactics for suppressing independent civil society. The visit of President Aliyev to Tbilisi on 6 April — <a href="https://www.occrp.org/en/news/georgia-deports-azerbaijani-journalist-bypassing-european-court-ruling" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169027">the day after Sadigov’s forced return</a> — reinforces concerns about <a href="https://info.imedi.ge/en/foreigpolicy/9179/georgian-fm-ilham-aliyevs-visit-to-georgia-holds-major-importance-for-bilateral-relations" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169028">deliberate bilateral coordination</a> aimed at restricting human rights and fundamental freedoms, in direct contradiction with both states’ obligations as Council of Europe member states.

The credibility of the European human rights system depends not only on the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, but on their effective implementation and on the collective commitment of member states to uphold the Convention.

We therefore call on you to act urgently and to use the tools available to your office:
<ul>
 	<li><strong>Invoke Article 52 of the European Convention on Human Rights </strong>to request that Azerbaijan furnish an explanation of the manner in which its domestic law ensures the effective implementation of the Convention, in light of a decade of documented and systematic violations, including the transnational repression of its own citizens on the territory of fellow member states;</li>
 	<li><strong>Commission an independent report </strong>on Georgia's conduct in the Sadigov case to be presented to the Council of Europe, examining whether Georgia's expulsion of Afgan Sadigov — carried out in direct defiance of a binding interim measure of the European Court of Human Rights — is compatible with its obligations under the Convention;</li>
 	<li><strong>Appoint a Special Representative on the South Caucasus</strong> to ensure a sustained, coordinated political and diplomatic response to the cross-border suppression of dissent — a phenomenon that existing mechanisms have demonstrably failed to address.</li>
 	<li><strong>Call on Council of Europe member States to make use of available diplomatic, political, and other appropriate measures </strong>to support the protection of Afgan Sadigov, including by facilitating his right to family reunification, particularly in light of the fact that he has already been summoned twice by the authorities since his return to Baku.</li>
</ul>
As you know, the case of Afgan Sadigov <a href="https://cpj.org/2026/01/azerbaijan-sentences-exiled-journalists-to-lengthy-prison-terms-in-absentia/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1535169029">does not stand alone</a>. It is the latest episode in a decade of documented, systematic repression by Azerbaijan — repression repeatedly condemned by human rights organisations and the European Court of Human Rights, including through multiple judgements finding a violation of Article 18 of the Convention, yet met with a measured and conciliatory response from the Organisation’s leadership. This has carried implications: it has emboldened Azerbaijan to expand its repression beyond its own borders and lowered the threshold for what other member states consider acceptable. Georgia's conduct in the Sadigov case is a direct expression of that lowered threshold. The credibility of the European human rights system is now at stake.

We remain at your disposal and look forward to your response.

Yours faithfully,]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Thailand: Conviction and prison sentences of four prominent pro-democracy activists on lèse-majesté charges</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/thailand-conviction-and-prison-sentences-of-four-prominent-pro-democracy-activists-on-lese-majeste-charges/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Esteban Munoz]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Feb 2026 17:09:51 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=24446</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p align="justify">The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a partnership of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), has received new information and requests your urgent intervention in the following situation in <b>Thailand</b>.</p>
<p align="justify"><b>New information:</b></p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory has been informed about the conviction of prominent pro-democracy activists Mr <b>Anon Nampa</b>, Ms <b>Pimsiri Petchnamrob</b>, Mr <b>Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk</b>, and Mr. <b>Promsorn Veerathamjaree</b> on charges of lèse-majesté in connection with their participation in a peaceful pro-democracy demonstration on 29 November 2020.</p>
<p align="justify">On 20 February 2026, the Bangkok Criminal Court convicted Anon Nampa, Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjaree for speeches delivered during a peaceful assembly entitled “Disarm Thai Feudalism,” which was held on 29 November 2020 in front of the 11th Infantry Regiment King’s Guard in Bangkok. All four were found guilty under Article 112 of the Criminal Code (“lèse-majesté”), and sentenced to four years in prison each. Their sentences were reduced to two years and eight months in prison, because the Court found the defendants’ testimonies useful. Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjaree were subsequently granted temporary release on bail, set at 200,000 baht (about 5,490 Euros) for Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk and 150,000 Thai baht (about 4,118 Euros) for Pimsiri Petchnamrob and Promsorn Veerathamjaree, pending appeal. Anon Nampa, who did not file a bail request, remains detained at the Bangkok Remand Prison.</p>
<p align="justify">The four pro-democracy activists were also convicted under the 2020 Emergency Decree and for using a sound amplifier without permission and were fined a total of 10,200 Thai baht (about 280 Euros) each.</p>
<p align="justify">During the above-mentioned peaceful demonstration, Anon Nampa and Pimsiri Petchnamrob advocated for reforms of the monarchy and amendments to Thailand’s 2017 Constitution. In his speech, Anon Nampa criticised, <i>inter alia</i>, the transfer of military units to the King’s personal command and the transfer of public property to private ownership. In her speech, Pimsiri Petchnamrob addressed the relationship between the military and the monarchy and the history of military coups in Thailand, and cited a <a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2017/02/thailand-un-rights-expert-concerned-continued-use-lese-majeste-prosecutions?utm_">statement</a> by the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, which argued for the incompatibility of Article 112 of the Criminal Code with democratic principles.</p>
<p align="justify">The four pro-democracy activists denied all charges against them. Ms Pimsiri maintained that she did not make personal remarks about members of the Thai royal family and only quoted the UN Special Rapporteur’s critique of Thailand’s ‘‘lèse-majesté’’ legislation. Mr Anon maintained that his speech and remarks constituted legitimate criticism and were protected by his right to freedom of expression.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory recalls that Mr Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk was <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/region/asia/thailand/Thailand-Thai-human-rights-12787">arbitrarily detained</a> for seven years, from April 2011 to April 2018, as a result of his arrest and subsequent conviction to 10 years in prison on lèse-majesté charges.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory also notes that Mr Promsorn Veerathamjaree has already been convicted on three prior lèse-majesté cases. He was <a href="https://prachataienglish.com/node/11327">sentenced</a> to prison terms in connection with his participation in pro-democracy protests in 2021. In each of those cases, he was released on bail pending appeal.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory further recalls that the additional two years and eight months of imprisonment imposed on Anon Nampa under Article 112 bring his total prison term to 31 years, nine months, and 20 days. Mr Anon has been arbitrarily <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/thailand-eight-conviction-of-pro-democracy-activist-anon-nampa-under">incarcerated</a> at the Bangkok Remand Prison since his first lèse-majesté conviction on 26 September 2023. All convictions are currently under appeal, while numerous bail applications have been consistently denied. Between September 2023 and February 2026, he submitted 93 bail applications and 43 appeals against bail denial orders, all of which were rejected. The Observatory notes that Mr. Anon’s latest conviction and prison sentence followed 10 previous convictions related to his public statements and his advocacy for human rights and democratic reforms in Thailand.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory points out that <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/thailand-tenth-conviction-of-pro-democracy-activist-anon-nampa-on">on 9 July 2025</a>, Mr Anon Nampa was <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/thailand-tenth-conviction-of-pro-democracy-activist-anon-nampa-on">sentenced</a> for the 10th time to two years in prison under Article 112 and four months under Article 116 of the Criminal Code (sedition) in connection with a speech he delivered at a protest in front of Parliament in Bangkok on 17 November 2020.</p>
<p align="justify">According to Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, between 19 November 2020 and 20 February 2026, at least 291 people, including numerous human rights defenders and 20 minors, were charged under Article 112 of the Criminal Code. Sixteen were reportedly detained pending trial or appeal, and 18 others were serving prison sentences. The systematic abuse of Articles 112 and 116 against peaceful critics and protesters reflects a broader pattern of judicial harassment and a shrinking civic space in Thailand.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory recalls that Thailand is a State party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Articles 9 and 14 of the ICCPR guarantee the rights to liberty and to a fair trial, while Articles 19, 21, and 22 protect the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, and association. Any restriction must be strictly necessary and proportionate. The imposition of lengthy prison sentences for peaceful criticism of public institutions is incompatible with these obligations.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory considers that the conviction and continued arbitrary detention of Anon Nampa and the conviction of Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjaree, appear to be solely aimed at punishing them for their legitimate human rights activities and the peaceful exercise of their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, in violation of international human rights law.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory calls on the Thai authorities to immediately and unconditionally release Anon Nampa, and to ensure that Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjareeis are not subjected to arbitrary detention, as well as to release all other arbitrarily detained human rights defenders in the country, and to put an end to all forms of judicial harassment against them.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="justify">The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a partnership of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), has received new information and requests your urgent intervention in the following situation in <b>Thailand</b>.</p>
<p align="justify"><b>New information:</b></p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory has been informed about the conviction of prominent pro-democracy activists Mr <b>Anon Nampa</b>, Ms <b>Pimsiri Petchnamrob</b>, Mr <b>Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk</b>, and Mr. <b>Promsorn Veerathamjaree</b> on charges of lèse-majesté in connection with their participation in a peaceful pro-democracy demonstration on 29 November 2020.</p>
<p align="justify">On 20 February 2026, the Bangkok Criminal Court convicted Anon Nampa, Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjaree for speeches delivered during a peaceful assembly entitled “Disarm Thai Feudalism,” which was held on 29 November 2020 in front of the 11th Infantry Regiment King’s Guard in Bangkok. All four were found guilty under Article 112 of the Criminal Code (“lèse-majesté”), and sentenced to four years in prison each. Their sentences were reduced to two years and eight months in prison, because the Court found the defendants’ testimonies useful. Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjaree were subsequently granted temporary release on bail, set at 200,000 baht (about 5,490 Euros) for Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk and 150,000 Thai baht (about 4,118 Euros) for Pimsiri Petchnamrob and Promsorn Veerathamjaree, pending appeal. Anon Nampa, who did not file a bail request, remains detained at the Bangkok Remand Prison.</p>
<p align="justify">The four pro-democracy activists were also convicted under the 2020 Emergency Decree and for using a sound amplifier without permission and were fined a total of 10,200 Thai baht (about 280 Euros) each.</p>
<p align="justify">During the above-mentioned peaceful demonstration, Anon Nampa and Pimsiri Petchnamrob advocated for reforms of the monarchy and amendments to Thailand’s 2017 Constitution. In his speech, Anon Nampa criticised, <i>inter alia</i>, the transfer of military units to the King’s personal command and the transfer of public property to private ownership. In her speech, Pimsiri Petchnamrob addressed the relationship between the military and the monarchy and the history of military coups in Thailand, and cited a <a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2017/02/thailand-un-rights-expert-concerned-continued-use-lese-majeste-prosecutions?utm_">statement</a> by the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, which argued for the incompatibility of Article 112 of the Criminal Code with democratic principles.</p>
<p align="justify">The four pro-democracy activists denied all charges against them. Ms Pimsiri maintained that she did not make personal remarks about members of the Thai royal family and only quoted the UN Special Rapporteur’s critique of Thailand’s ‘‘lèse-majesté’’ legislation. Mr Anon maintained that his speech and remarks constituted legitimate criticism and were protected by his right to freedom of expression.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory recalls that Mr Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk was <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/region/asia/thailand/Thailand-Thai-human-rights-12787">arbitrarily detained</a> for seven years, from April 2011 to April 2018, as a result of his arrest and subsequent conviction to 10 years in prison on lèse-majesté charges.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory also notes that Mr Promsorn Veerathamjaree has already been convicted on three prior lèse-majesté cases. He was <a href="https://prachataienglish.com/node/11327">sentenced</a> to prison terms in connection with his participation in pro-democracy protests in 2021. In each of those cases, he was released on bail pending appeal.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory further recalls that the additional two years and eight months of imprisonment imposed on Anon Nampa under Article 112 bring his total prison term to 31 years, nine months, and 20 days. Mr Anon has been arbitrarily <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/thailand-eight-conviction-of-pro-democracy-activist-anon-nampa-under">incarcerated</a> at the Bangkok Remand Prison since his first lèse-majesté conviction on 26 September 2023. All convictions are currently under appeal, while numerous bail applications have been consistently denied. Between September 2023 and February 2026, he submitted 93 bail applications and 43 appeals against bail denial orders, all of which were rejected. The Observatory notes that Mr. Anon’s latest conviction and prison sentence followed 10 previous convictions related to his public statements and his advocacy for human rights and democratic reforms in Thailand.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory points out that <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/thailand-tenth-conviction-of-pro-democracy-activist-anon-nampa-on">on 9 July 2025</a>, Mr Anon Nampa was <a href="https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/thailand-tenth-conviction-of-pro-democracy-activist-anon-nampa-on">sentenced</a> for the 10th time to two years in prison under Article 112 and four months under Article 116 of the Criminal Code (sedition) in connection with a speech he delivered at a protest in front of Parliament in Bangkok on 17 November 2020.</p>
<p align="justify">According to Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, between 19 November 2020 and 20 February 2026, at least 291 people, including numerous human rights defenders and 20 minors, were charged under Article 112 of the Criminal Code. Sixteen were reportedly detained pending trial or appeal, and 18 others were serving prison sentences. The systematic abuse of Articles 112 and 116 against peaceful critics and protesters reflects a broader pattern of judicial harassment and a shrinking civic space in Thailand.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory recalls that Thailand is a State party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Articles 9 and 14 of the ICCPR guarantee the rights to liberty and to a fair trial, while Articles 19, 21, and 22 protect the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, and association. Any restriction must be strictly necessary and proportionate. The imposition of lengthy prison sentences for peaceful criticism of public institutions is incompatible with these obligations.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory considers that the conviction and continued arbitrary detention of Anon Nampa and the conviction of Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjaree, appear to be solely aimed at punishing them for their legitimate human rights activities and the peaceful exercise of their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, in violation of international human rights law.</p>
<p align="justify">The Observatory calls on the Thai authorities to immediately and unconditionally release Anon Nampa, and to ensure that Pimsiri Petchnamrob, Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk, and Promsorn Veerathamjareeis are not subjected to arbitrary detention, as well as to release all other arbitrarily detained human rights defenders in the country, and to put an end to all forms of judicial harassment against them.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Tchad : obstruction à la liberté de circulation de quatre membres de la LTDH par le Délégué général du gouvernement auprès de la province du Lac</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/tchad-obstruction-a-la-liberte-de-circulation-de-quatre-membres-de-la-ltdh-par-le-delegue-general-du-gouvernement-aupres-de-la-province-du-lac/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2025 11:57:05 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=24144</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[L’Observatoire a été informé de l’obstruction à la liberté de circulation de quatre membres de la Ligue tchadienne des droits de l’Homme (LTDH), à savoir Mme <strong>Teresa Boyalngar</strong>, chargée des activités socio-économiques, et MM. <strong>Lamtouin Lagasso</strong>, chargé des programmes, <strong>Djasrabe Weilengar</strong>, gestionnaire, et <strong>Madjingue Djimtoingar</strong>, le chauffeur de l’organisation. La LTDH est une organisation non gouvernementale de défense et de promotion des droits humains, œuvrant pour la bonne gouvernance au Tchad, en Afrique et dans le monde. La LTDH est membre de la FIDH et de l’OMCT.

Le 6 novembre 2025 à 12h, alors qu’ils s’étaient rendus présenter leurs « civilités » au Délégué général du gouvernement auprès de la province du Lac, le général Saleh Tidjani Hagar, ce dernier a qualifié la LTDH « d’ONG infiltrée » et ses représentant·es d’« espions », avant de leur « interdire de quitter la ville de Bol tant que les premiers responsables de l’organisation ne se présente[raie]nt pas ». Aucun responsable de la LTDH ne s’étant déplacé à la date de publication de cette alerte urgente, les quatre défenseur·es sont toujours retenu·es de façon illégale et arbitraire au sein de leur auberge, malgré l’alerte donnée aux autorités judiciaires. Cette interdiction de quitter leur auberge intervient en violation évidente du droit à la liberté d’association, de réunion, et à la libre circulation des personnes, pourtant reconnus à l’article 28 de la Constitution tchadienne et respectivement aux articles 22, 21 et 12 du Pacte international relatif aux droits civils et politiques et aux articles 10, 11 et 12 de la Charte africaine des droits de l’Homme et des peuples, auxquels le Tchad est partie.

Les quatre membres de la LTDH étaient parti·es le 29 octobre 2025 au nord de N’Djamena, la capitale, en mission dans la province du Lac, pour réaliser des activités dans six localités, à savoir Kouloudia, Doum-doum, N’gouri, Bol, Baga-Sola et Liwa jusqu’au 15 novembre 2025. Leurs activités s’inscrivaient dans le cadre du projet « Prévention de la radicalisation et de l’extrémisme violent dans le Lac » de la LTDH, soutenu par le <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5NzcmZD1tM285ZjNn.haJTlj_aU3iTMhShM7UQiaLMjPFkYEWVN2_zKHXudV0" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021977">Fonds mondial pour l’engagement de la communauté et la résilience (GCERF)</a>, un fonds suisse créé à Genève en 2014 pour soutenir des ONG à travers le monde. Après avoir mis en œuvre les activités escomptées à Doum-doum, Kouloudia et N’gouri, l’équipe de la LTDH était arrivée à Bol le 5 novembre 2025.

L’Observatoire note que le général Saleh Tidjani Hagar était précédemment directeur général des renseignements généraux et des investigations, avant de prendre les fonctions de Délégué général du gouvernement auprès de la province du Lac le 27 mars 2024, deux services qui sont régulièrement pointés du doigt dans plusieurs actes de violations des droits humains, notamment des <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5ODImZD16Nmg0ZzZv.ndjjBCNNkCFA5aIPUQYOKJOMpVzHXdRCCmGgckVoNrQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021982">séquestrations et tortures</a>.

L’Observatoire souligne que la LTDH est régulièrement visée par des attaques du régime tchadien depuis plusieurs années. Cette surveillance s’est particulièrement accrue après la répression violente des manifestations du jeudi 20 octobre 2022 contre la prolongation de la période de transition et le maintien au pouvoir de Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno. La LTDH et l’OMCT ont publié un <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5ODcmZD12NWc1aDN4.Ohgb7M6U-vhCUDdVFJwztiXW1fh-N9-PIYonpvI8_Ok" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021987">rapport</a> faisant état de « 218 personnes tuées et plusieurs centaines des blessé.es, 40 disparition forcées et au moins 1300 arrestations » lors de ce « jeudi noir », dont la <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5OTMmZD12NGw5bTFp.SD489tD-VfFXex4ojsfa_845zogfYiuTaGHfH-5GIxo" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021993">loi d’amnistie générale</a> consacre l’impunité des responsables de ces violations.

L’Observatoire rappelle que le 11 avril 2022, M. <strong>Baldal Oyamta</strong>, coordinateur national de la LTDH, avait <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5OTcmZD12Mmk2ZDB1.xqzKlM1Sgcbwo7o7tZK6NkCM3MewKh8d5iNdsirxUnY" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021997">échappé</a> à une tentative d’assassinat à N’Djamena. En novembre 2020, en l’espace de deux semaines, il avait reçu 23 SMS de menaces liées à ses activités professionnelles en tant que défenseur des droits humains, et plus particulièrement à ces travaux sur l’accaparement des terres au Tchad. À la date de publication de cet appel urgent, aucune enquête n’a été ouverte sur ces menaces malgré un dépôt de plainte « contre X ».

L’Observatoire rappelle également que cette mesure s’inscrit dans une dynamique plus large de répression et de criminalisation de la société civile et de toute voix dissidente qui prévaut depuis plusieurs années au Tchad. Depuis l’accession au pouvoir par un coup d’État de Mahamat Idriss Déby, et <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMDEmZD1oMnEyZTBm.mJVwDuwFmrPfP1jpVUvVcKYM5ThGQgYsE9tAeibso8A" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022001">malgré le retour à l’ordre constitutionnel en mai 2024</a> après une période de transition, l’espace civique n’a cessé de se rétrécir, notamment à travers la multiplication de poursuites-bâillon, la surveillance accrue de la société civile, et désormais les <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMDUmZD1lMWY3YTNu.0_86oR7RSBzuyE2DkaNGldDZXEIJrkO2rqFo8eMuqQQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022005">déchéances de nationalité</a>. L’Observatoire avait par ailleurs, dans son <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMDgmZD11NXAxazNl.msR6c4zk2ZLOp8oxK3XhvN_O-hIsYbjTPfDa3mkfH_M" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022008">rapport</a> intitulé « <em>Espace civique et défenseur·es des droits humains au Sahel : convergence régionale des pratiques de répression</em> » publié en février 2025, mis en évidence la mise en place par le régime tchadien au cours de ces dernières années, de techniques de répression telle que l’utilisation généralisée des arrestations et détentions arbitraires, afin de réduire au silence toute voix dissidente.

La révision constitutionnelle adoptée le 3 octobre 2025 par le parlement tchadien dont la loi constitutionnelle a été promulguée le 8 octobre 2025 par le Président tchadien, a consisté à instaurer un septennat (précédemment quinquennat) et à supprimer le verrou de la limitation du nombre de mandats présidentiels donnant à Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno la possibilité d’être Président à vie. Les organisations de la société civile et les défenseur·es des droits qui se sont publiquement opposé·es à cette révision ont fait l’objet d’une campagne de représailles. En 2022, le Comité des Nations unies contre la torture avait pourtant <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMTEmZD15N2kxaTFu.ixZkFUqQKNvI_adq-IUZHyE_YrRe7jtpkjL4dmZd1DA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022011">exhorté</a> le Tchad à protéger effectivement les défenseur·es des droits humains, opposant·es, société civile et journalistes contre toute intimidation, violence, privation arbitraire de liberté, poursuites abusives, torture, disparitions forcées et exécutions extrajudiciaires liées à leurs activités.

L’Observatoire condamne fermement cette obstruction à la liberté de circulation de Mme Teresa Boyalngar et MM. Lamtouin Lagasso, Djasrabe Weilengar et Madjingue Djimtoingar, qui ne semble viser qu’à les punir pour l’exercice légitime de leurs activités de défense des droits humains.

L’Observatoire appelle les autorités tchadiennes à immédiatement rétablir la liberté de circulation des quatre membres de la LTDH, et à mettre un terme à toute pratique de représailles et de harcèlement, y compris judiciaire, à l’encontre des défenseur·es des droits humains dans le pays.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[L’Observatoire a été informé de l’obstruction à la liberté de circulation de quatre membres de la Ligue tchadienne des droits de l’Homme (LTDH), à savoir Mme <strong>Teresa Boyalngar</strong>, chargée des activités socio-économiques, et MM. <strong>Lamtouin Lagasso</strong>, chargé des programmes, <strong>Djasrabe Weilengar</strong>, gestionnaire, et <strong>Madjingue Djimtoingar</strong>, le chauffeur de l’organisation. La LTDH est une organisation non gouvernementale de défense et de promotion des droits humains, œuvrant pour la bonne gouvernance au Tchad, en Afrique et dans le monde. La LTDH est membre de la FIDH et de l’OMCT.

Le 6 novembre 2025 à 12h, alors qu’ils s’étaient rendus présenter leurs « civilités » au Délégué général du gouvernement auprès de la province du Lac, le général Saleh Tidjani Hagar, ce dernier a qualifié la LTDH « d’ONG infiltrée » et ses représentant·es d’« espions », avant de leur « interdire de quitter la ville de Bol tant que les premiers responsables de l’organisation ne se présente[raie]nt pas ». Aucun responsable de la LTDH ne s’étant déplacé à la date de publication de cette alerte urgente, les quatre défenseur·es sont toujours retenu·es de façon illégale et arbitraire au sein de leur auberge, malgré l’alerte donnée aux autorités judiciaires. Cette interdiction de quitter leur auberge intervient en violation évidente du droit à la liberté d’association, de réunion, et à la libre circulation des personnes, pourtant reconnus à l’article 28 de la Constitution tchadienne et respectivement aux articles 22, 21 et 12 du Pacte international relatif aux droits civils et politiques et aux articles 10, 11 et 12 de la Charte africaine des droits de l’Homme et des peuples, auxquels le Tchad est partie.

Les quatre membres de la LTDH étaient parti·es le 29 octobre 2025 au nord de N’Djamena, la capitale, en mission dans la province du Lac, pour réaliser des activités dans six localités, à savoir Kouloudia, Doum-doum, N’gouri, Bol, Baga-Sola et Liwa jusqu’au 15 novembre 2025. Leurs activités s’inscrivaient dans le cadre du projet « Prévention de la radicalisation et de l’extrémisme violent dans le Lac » de la LTDH, soutenu par le <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5NzcmZD1tM285ZjNn.haJTlj_aU3iTMhShM7UQiaLMjPFkYEWVN2_zKHXudV0" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021977">Fonds mondial pour l’engagement de la communauté et la résilience (GCERF)</a>, un fonds suisse créé à Genève en 2014 pour soutenir des ONG à travers le monde. Après avoir mis en œuvre les activités escomptées à Doum-doum, Kouloudia et N’gouri, l’équipe de la LTDH était arrivée à Bol le 5 novembre 2025.

L’Observatoire note que le général Saleh Tidjani Hagar était précédemment directeur général des renseignements généraux et des investigations, avant de prendre les fonctions de Délégué général du gouvernement auprès de la province du Lac le 27 mars 2024, deux services qui sont régulièrement pointés du doigt dans plusieurs actes de violations des droits humains, notamment des <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5ODImZD16Nmg0ZzZv.ndjjBCNNkCFA5aIPUQYOKJOMpVzHXdRCCmGgckVoNrQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021982">séquestrations et tortures</a>.

L’Observatoire souligne que la LTDH est régulièrement visée par des attaques du régime tchadien depuis plusieurs années. Cette surveillance s’est particulièrement accrue après la répression violente des manifestations du jeudi 20 octobre 2022 contre la prolongation de la période de transition et le maintien au pouvoir de Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno. La LTDH et l’OMCT ont publié un <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5ODcmZD12NWc1aDN4.Ohgb7M6U-vhCUDdVFJwztiXW1fh-N9-PIYonpvI8_Ok" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021987">rapport</a> faisant état de « 218 personnes tuées et plusieurs centaines des blessé.es, 40 disparition forcées et au moins 1300 arrestations » lors de ce « jeudi noir », dont la <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5OTMmZD12NGw5bTFp.SD489tD-VfFXex4ojsfa_845zogfYiuTaGHfH-5GIxo" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021993">loi d’amnistie générale</a> consacre l’impunité des responsables de ces violations.

L’Observatoire rappelle que le 11 avril 2022, M. <strong>Baldal Oyamta</strong>, coordinateur national de la LTDH, avait <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjE5OTcmZD12Mmk2ZDB1.xqzKlM1Sgcbwo7o7tZK6NkCM3MewKh8d5iNdsirxUnY" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494021997">échappé</a> à une tentative d’assassinat à N’Djamena. En novembre 2020, en l’espace de deux semaines, il avait reçu 23 SMS de menaces liées à ses activités professionnelles en tant que défenseur des droits humains, et plus particulièrement à ces travaux sur l’accaparement des terres au Tchad. À la date de publication de cet appel urgent, aucune enquête n’a été ouverte sur ces menaces malgré un dépôt de plainte « contre X ».

L’Observatoire rappelle également que cette mesure s’inscrit dans une dynamique plus large de répression et de criminalisation de la société civile et de toute voix dissidente qui prévaut depuis plusieurs années au Tchad. Depuis l’accession au pouvoir par un coup d’État de Mahamat Idriss Déby, et <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMDEmZD1oMnEyZTBm.mJVwDuwFmrPfP1jpVUvVcKYM5ThGQgYsE9tAeibso8A" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022001">malgré le retour à l’ordre constitutionnel en mai 2024</a> après une période de transition, l’espace civique n’a cessé de se rétrécir, notamment à travers la multiplication de poursuites-bâillon, la surveillance accrue de la société civile, et désormais les <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMDUmZD1lMWY3YTNu.0_86oR7RSBzuyE2DkaNGldDZXEIJrkO2rqFo8eMuqQQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022005">déchéances de nationalité</a>. L’Observatoire avait par ailleurs, dans son <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMDgmZD11NXAxazNl.msR6c4zk2ZLOp8oxK3XhvN_O-hIsYbjTPfDa3mkfH_M" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022008">rapport</a> intitulé « <em>Espace civique et défenseur·es des droits humains au Sahel : convergence régionale des pratiques de répression</em> » publié en février 2025, mis en évidence la mise en place par le régime tchadien au cours de ces dernières années, de techniques de répression telle que l’utilisation généralisée des arrestations et détentions arbitraires, afin de réduire au silence toute voix dissidente.

La révision constitutionnelle adoptée le 3 octobre 2025 par le parlement tchadien dont la loi constitutionnelle a été promulguée le 8 octobre 2025 par le Président tchadien, a consisté à instaurer un septennat (précédemment quinquennat) et à supprimer le verrou de la limitation du nombre de mandats présidentiels donnant à Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno la possibilité d’être Président à vie. Les organisations de la société civile et les défenseur·es des droits qui se sont publiquement opposé·es à cette révision ont fait l’objet d’une campagne de représailles. En 2022, le Comité des Nations unies contre la torture avait pourtant <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODc2MzYxNzM2NTMxNzQ0MjQ5JmM9YTF4MSZiPTE0OTQwMjIwMTEmZD15N2kxaTFu.ixZkFUqQKNvI_adq-IUZHyE_YrRe7jtpkjL4dmZd1DA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1494022011">exhorté</a> le Tchad à protéger effectivement les défenseur·es des droits humains, opposant·es, société civile et journalistes contre toute intimidation, violence, privation arbitraire de liberté, poursuites abusives, torture, disparitions forcées et exécutions extrajudiciaires liées à leurs activités.

L’Observatoire condamne fermement cette obstruction à la liberté de circulation de Mme Teresa Boyalngar et MM. Lamtouin Lagasso, Djasrabe Weilengar et Madjingue Djimtoingar, qui ne semble viser qu’à les punir pour l’exercice légitime de leurs activités de défense des droits humains.

L’Observatoire appelle les autorités tchadiennes à immédiatement rétablir la liberté de circulation des quatre membres de la LTDH, et à mettre un terme à toute pratique de représailles et de harcèlement, y compris judiciaire, à l’encontre des défenseur·es des droits humains dans le pays.]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Israel/Palestine : Illegal interception of the Sumud Flotilla and arrest of peaceful activists</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/israel-palestine-illegal-interception-of-the-sumud-flotilla-and-arrest-of-peaceful-activists/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Oct 2025 07:21:08 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=24038</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong><em>Paris-Geneva, 2 October 2025 – Today, the Sumud Flotilla for Freedom, carrying humanitarian aid for Gaza and composed by international human rights defenders and activists committed to non-violent action, was violently boarded in international waters by the Israeli army. Hundreds of peaceful activists on board were kidnapped </em></strong><strong><em>and</em></strong><strong><em> illegaly arrested, including two International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) Vice-Presidents. The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (a partnership of FIDH and OMCT) strongly condemns the unlawful interception of the Sumud Flotilla and calls on the Israeli authorities to immediately and unconditionally release all those detained. The Observatory also calls on the governments of the detainees’ countries of origin to take all necessary diplomatic measures to put pressure on Israel to immediately release their nationals.</em></strong>

During the night of 1st to 2nd October, 2025, the Israeli army violently intercepted the boats composing the <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5NzYmZD1qN3c2cTlk.FiQB3qF9fK6syGZy2fwbTl3EfGEIhvCXMLR4E98z9pk" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401976">Sumud Flotilla</a> -a non-violent humanitarian initiative aimed at breaking the siege and delivering food and medical supplies to Gaza- in international waters. The peaceful activists on board of the vessels were illegaly arrested -as Israel has no legal authority in international waters- and their boats taken to the port of Ashdod. <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5NzgmZD1pNm0yczFn.28Br7Clhqdm1ufRlZ81TS0DXanMdHefiTQGFn4o5R6k" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401978">Two FIDH Vice-Presidents : </a><a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5NzkmZD14MXIxczRn.LmIpgXGpm0y5pOjqE3l9AERGu9DoocOiVyLAmRBKywk" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401979"><strong>Alexis Deswaef</strong> from Belgium and <strong>Aziz Rhali</strong> from Morroco, were among the participants</a> and are now part of the detainees, <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5ODEmZD14MnU2ZTB3.EITdgqNnOCmNCdZA6xq_T8JNf3Bj7H14QyWzwftCIlI" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401981">along with many other participants of the flotilla.</a> According to the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel (Adalah), the hearings began early in the morning of 2 October, in the absence of lawyers. It was only at 4 p.m. that day that Adalah's lawyers were able to gain access to the activists and begin to accompany them.

The Observatory recalls that the arbitrary arrest and detention of individuals engaging in peaceful human rights activities constitutes a flagrant violation of international human rights law, including the rights to liberty, freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and association. It further underscores that such actions form part of a broader pattern of repression aimed at silencing voices that expose the ongoing genocide in Gaza and challenge Israel’s crimes and gross violations of international humanitarian law.

The Observatory urgently calls on the Israeli authorities to guarantee, in all circumstances, the physical integrity and psychological well-being of all the peaceful activists arrested and to immediately and unconditionally release all those illegally detained, including the two FIDH Vice-Presidents. The Observatory further requests the Israeli authorities to refrain from any further harassment or intimidation against human rights defenders, whether domestic or international, who seek to denounce the ongoing genocide in Gaza and to uphold the human rights of all Palestinians.

The Observatory also calls on the governments of the detainees’ countries of origin -around 45 countries were represented among the participants of the Sumud Flotilla- to deploy all necessary diplomatic actions in order to put pressure on Israel to immediately release their nationals.

The Observatory reaffirms its solidarity with all defenders who, through peaceful means, continue to stand for justice, dignity and human rights, and stresses that the international community must hold Israel accountable for its persistent violations of international law. The Observatory will continue to monitor this situation closely and mobilise all available mechanisms to ensure that those arbitrarily detained are immediately freed and able to continue their legitimate human rights work without fear of reprisal.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong><em>Paris-Geneva, 2 October 2025 – Today, the Sumud Flotilla for Freedom, carrying humanitarian aid for Gaza and composed by international human rights defenders and activists committed to non-violent action, was violently boarded in international waters by the Israeli army. Hundreds of peaceful activists on board were kidnapped </em></strong><strong><em>and</em></strong><strong><em> illegaly arrested, including two International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) Vice-Presidents. The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (a partnership of FIDH and OMCT) strongly condemns the unlawful interception of the Sumud Flotilla and calls on the Israeli authorities to immediately and unconditionally release all those detained. The Observatory also calls on the governments of the detainees’ countries of origin to take all necessary diplomatic measures to put pressure on Israel to immediately release their nationals.</em></strong>

During the night of 1st to 2nd October, 2025, the Israeli army violently intercepted the boats composing the <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5NzYmZD1qN3c2cTlk.FiQB3qF9fK6syGZy2fwbTl3EfGEIhvCXMLR4E98z9pk" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401976">Sumud Flotilla</a> -a non-violent humanitarian initiative aimed at breaking the siege and delivering food and medical supplies to Gaza- in international waters. The peaceful activists on board of the vessels were illegaly arrested -as Israel has no legal authority in international waters- and their boats taken to the port of Ashdod. <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5NzgmZD1pNm0yczFn.28Br7Clhqdm1ufRlZ81TS0DXanMdHefiTQGFn4o5R6k" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401978">Two FIDH Vice-Presidents : </a><a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5NzkmZD14MXIxczRn.LmIpgXGpm0y5pOjqE3l9AERGu9DoocOiVyLAmRBKywk" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401979"><strong>Alexis Deswaef</strong> from Belgium and <strong>Aziz Rhali</strong> from Morroco, were among the participants</a> and are now part of the detainees, <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yODQ2NzI1MTU1MjUyNjA2NzIxJmM9aTFqOSZiPTE0ODI0MDE5ODEmZD14MnU2ZTB3.EITdgqNnOCmNCdZA6xq_T8JNf3Bj7H14QyWzwftCIlI" target="_top" data-link-id="1482401981">along with many other participants of the flotilla.</a> According to the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel (Adalah), the hearings began early in the morning of 2 October, in the absence of lawyers. It was only at 4 p.m. that day that Adalah's lawyers were able to gain access to the activists and begin to accompany them.

The Observatory recalls that the arbitrary arrest and detention of individuals engaging in peaceful human rights activities constitutes a flagrant violation of international human rights law, including the rights to liberty, freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and association. It further underscores that such actions form part of a broader pattern of repression aimed at silencing voices that expose the ongoing genocide in Gaza and challenge Israel’s crimes and gross violations of international humanitarian law.

The Observatory urgently calls on the Israeli authorities to guarantee, in all circumstances, the physical integrity and psychological well-being of all the peaceful activists arrested and to immediately and unconditionally release all those illegally detained, including the two FIDH Vice-Presidents. The Observatory further requests the Israeli authorities to refrain from any further harassment or intimidation against human rights defenders, whether domestic or international, who seek to denounce the ongoing genocide in Gaza and to uphold the human rights of all Palestinians.

The Observatory also calls on the governments of the detainees’ countries of origin -around 45 countries were represented among the participants of the Sumud Flotilla- to deploy all necessary diplomatic actions in order to put pressure on Israel to immediately release their nationals.

The Observatory reaffirms its solidarity with all defenders who, through peaceful means, continue to stand for justice, dignity and human rights, and stresses that the international community must hold Israel accountable for its persistent violations of international law. The Observatory will continue to monitor this situation closely and mobilise all available mechanisms to ensure that those arbitrarily detained are immediately freed and able to continue their legitimate human rights work without fear of reprisal.]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<item>
		<title>Egypt: State harassment of Mohamed Abdel Salam and AFTE must end!</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/egypt-state-harassment-of-mohamed-abdel-salam-and-afte-must-end/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jul 2025 15:51:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=23788</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<em><strong>The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (FIDH-OMCT), along with the undersigned human rights organisations, call on the Egyptian authorities to immediately end all forms of harassment or intimidation against Mohamed Abdel Salam and the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression for exercising their fundamental human rights activities.</strong></em>

The undersigned human rights organisations call on the Egyptian authorities to immediately end all forms of harassment or intimidation against human rights defender <strong>Mohamed Abdel Salam</strong>, Executive Director of the <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MTgmZD16NWkwdDNz.F4f0Wqw5aowBGZQ9b2O1qS953b_tUaPKGg1OgUQZ4vM" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228818">Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression (AFTE)</a>, in retaliation for his legitimate human rights work. The organisations are also calling to ensure that AFTE is free to conduct its activities without any undue restrictions.

<strong>24 July 2025 - </strong> On 20 May 2025, police officers at Cairo International Airport <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MTkmZD1mM3o0azJs.VyDTghZXdFqMZp3z1neKEOUZqwil7bJGsSBdxvlkJlE" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228819">detained</a> Mohamed Abdel Salam for about an hour and <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjAmZD1iNmg0czht.NOZHMkEbNsgcefDMNvgCfXG-q0CzjQ6BPktb_DcDBqw" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228820">confiscated his passport</a>, without providing any legal justification. During his brief detention, he was questioned about his travel and human rights work. <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjEmZD10NGc2cDd0.ym7kBthzMzgaYM0v9n2ya6BX6wc3-8CIDvQ13s6tcVQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228821">Upon release</a>, the police instructed him to report to a National Security Agency (NSA) office in Cairo for further questioning, again without any legal basis provided.

On 23 May, Mohamed Abdel Salam received a call from an NSA agent who asked him to <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjImZD14NnQzdzRi.drCZbQUFN2JYuft_zcxXUYiGvkKKH54Kok5btzdyhb8" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228822">collect his passport</a> from an agency office in Cairo. The agent claimed the confiscation of his passport had been an “unintended administrative mistake.” Mohamed Abdel Salam went to the NSA office and retrieved his passport without being questioned further.

This is not the first time the Egyptian authorities have targeted Mohamed Abdel Salam or AFTE. In 2018, airport authorities confiscated his passport and summoned him to the NSA without legal grounds. He was able to obtain a new passport in 2023. In November 2022, plainclothes police put AFTE’s Cairo office under surveillance for two weeks.

In May of this year, AFTE has attempted to submit its first request to receive funding to the Ministry of Social Solidarity, as Law No. 149/2019 (known as the 2019 associations law), which governs the operation of civil society organisations in Egypt, requires associations to obtain authorisation prior to receiving funding, contrary to international law and standards. Despite submitting all required documents nearly two months ago, the organisation has not received the approval yet, hindering AFTE’s ability to seek and use funds in order to pursue the associations’ activities.

AFTE has also encountered difficulties in maintaining a bank account since registering in 2023 under the 2019 associations law. After an eleven-month delay, a private bank finally opened an account for the organisation. Under international law, states have an obligation to protect the right to freedom of association, including by removing any restrictions on the right imposed by the state or other actors.

For over a decade, the Egyptian authorities have systematically targeted human rights defenders with criminal prosecutions, <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjMmZD1jMHY5ejV1.p0dse2Crgx6PYgHFQwLO-ZcC08xbpp8lrwUHdyHG5RA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228823">arbitrary travel bans</a>, and asset freezes. To this day, authorities continue to impose travel bans on staff members from several independent NGOs, including lawyer Huda Abdel Wahab, co-founder of the Arab Centre for Independence of Judiciary and Legal Profession (ACIJLP), Gasser Abdel-Razek, Kareem Ennarah, and Mohamed Bashir, three directors of the <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjQmZD1iNWowZTFt.AE5l-PYTnCiWBrT9HPQi1-uq7RzS4ghAXOwaaqCFXrA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228824">Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR)</a>.

We call on the Egyptian authorities to immediately stop subjecting Mohamed Abdel Salam and other human rights defenders to harassment or intimidation for exercising their fundamental rights. Civil society actors must be able to operate freely, safely, and without fear of retaliation, in line with Egypt’s constitutional and international obligations.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<em><strong>The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (FIDH-OMCT), along with the undersigned human rights organisations, call on the Egyptian authorities to immediately end all forms of harassment or intimidation against Mohamed Abdel Salam and the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression for exercising their fundamental human rights activities.</strong></em>

The undersigned human rights organisations call on the Egyptian authorities to immediately end all forms of harassment or intimidation against human rights defender <strong>Mohamed Abdel Salam</strong>, Executive Director of the <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MTgmZD16NWkwdDNz.F4f0Wqw5aowBGZQ9b2O1qS953b_tUaPKGg1OgUQZ4vM" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228818">Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression (AFTE)</a>, in retaliation for his legitimate human rights work. The organisations are also calling to ensure that AFTE is free to conduct its activities without any undue restrictions.

<strong>24 July 2025 - </strong> On 20 May 2025, police officers at Cairo International Airport <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MTkmZD1mM3o0azJs.VyDTghZXdFqMZp3z1neKEOUZqwil7bJGsSBdxvlkJlE" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228819">detained</a> Mohamed Abdel Salam for about an hour and <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjAmZD1iNmg0czht.NOZHMkEbNsgcefDMNvgCfXG-q0CzjQ6BPktb_DcDBqw" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228820">confiscated his passport</a>, without providing any legal justification. During his brief detention, he was questioned about his travel and human rights work. <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjEmZD10NGc2cDd0.ym7kBthzMzgaYM0v9n2ya6BX6wc3-8CIDvQ13s6tcVQ" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228821">Upon release</a>, the police instructed him to report to a National Security Agency (NSA) office in Cairo for further questioning, again without any legal basis provided.

On 23 May, Mohamed Abdel Salam received a call from an NSA agent who asked him to <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjImZD14NnQzdzRi.drCZbQUFN2JYuft_zcxXUYiGvkKKH54Kok5btzdyhb8" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228822">collect his passport</a> from an agency office in Cairo. The agent claimed the confiscation of his passport had been an “unintended administrative mistake.” Mohamed Abdel Salam went to the NSA office and retrieved his passport without being questioned further.

This is not the first time the Egyptian authorities have targeted Mohamed Abdel Salam or AFTE. In 2018, airport authorities confiscated his passport and summoned him to the NSA without legal grounds. He was able to obtain a new passport in 2023. In November 2022, plainclothes police put AFTE’s Cairo office under surveillance for two weeks.

In May of this year, AFTE has attempted to submit its first request to receive funding to the Ministry of Social Solidarity, as Law No. 149/2019 (known as the 2019 associations law), which governs the operation of civil society organisations in Egypt, requires associations to obtain authorisation prior to receiving funding, contrary to international law and standards. Despite submitting all required documents nearly two months ago, the organisation has not received the approval yet, hindering AFTE’s ability to seek and use funds in order to pursue the associations’ activities.

AFTE has also encountered difficulties in maintaining a bank account since registering in 2023 under the 2019 associations law. After an eleven-month delay, a private bank finally opened an account for the organisation. Under international law, states have an obligation to protect the right to freedom of association, including by removing any restrictions on the right imposed by the state or other actors.

For over a decade, the Egyptian authorities have systematically targeted human rights defenders with criminal prosecutions, <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjMmZD1jMHY5ejV1.p0dse2Crgx6PYgHFQwLO-ZcC08xbpp8lrwUHdyHG5RA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228823">arbitrary travel bans</a>, and asset freezes. To this day, authorities continue to impose travel bans on staff members from several independent NGOs, including lawyer Huda Abdel Wahab, co-founder of the Arab Centre for Independence of Judiciary and Legal Profession (ACIJLP), Gasser Abdel-Razek, Kareem Ennarah, and Mohamed Bashir, three directors of the <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzk1OTM4NDU2NjAwMDU3NDM5JmM9bDZwMSZiPTE0NjMyMjg4MjQmZD1iNWowZTFt.AE5l-PYTnCiWBrT9HPQi1-uq7RzS4ghAXOwaaqCFXrA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1463228824">Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR)</a>.

We call on the Egyptian authorities to immediately stop subjecting Mohamed Abdel Salam and other human rights defenders to harassment or intimidation for exercising their fundamental rights. Civil society actors must be able to operate freely, safely, and without fear of retaliation, in line with Egypt’s constitutional and international obligations.]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Thailand: Ongoing judicial harrasment against Pimsiri Petchnamrob</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/thailand-ongoing-judicial-harrasment-against-pimsiri-petchnamrob/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jun 2025 17:20:43 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=23651</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The Observatory has been informed about the ongoing legal proceedings against Ms <strong>Pimsiri Petchnamrob</strong>, a <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4NzkmZD13NnExcTVh.TmAvIMdZ-ywciRNdEb_siraasqLWCAIPzOsn4L34HUE" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737879">prominent pro-democracy activist</a> from Bangkok, who is being prosecuted and tried for “lèse-majesté”. She has been working as an advocate for human rights and equality and served as the Thailand Program Officer for ARTICLE 19, an international non-governmental organisation that works on freedom of expression and information.

The first hearings in Pimsiri Petchnamrob’s case were held from 4 to 6 June 2025 at the Bangkok Criminal Court and are scheduled to continue from 17 to 20 June and on 24 and 25 June 2025. Pimsiri Petchnamrob has been charged under Articles 112<a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote1sym">1</a> (“lèse-majesté”), 116 (“sedition”), and 215–216 (“failure to disperse illegal assembly”) of the Criminal Code as well as under the Emergency Decree<a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote2sym">2</a> and the Public Assembly Act of 2015. All these charges are related to a speech she gave on 29 November 2020 <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODImZD1sN3ozYzRj.ECakiVGkLlXRbqLYOVnaJXeatBWwHXJE3csv3tTRcKI" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737882">in front</a> of the Thai Army’s 11th Infantry Regiment King’s Guard in Bangkok during a peaceful pro-democracy demonstration, in which she cited a statement made in 2017 by the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression criticising the ‘‘lèse-majesté’’ provision of the Criminal Code.

Pimsiri Petchnamrob denies all charges, maintaining that she did not advocate for monarchy reform or make personal remarks about members of the Thai royal family, but only quoted the UN Special Rapporteur’s critique of Thailand’s ‘‘lèse-majesté’’, which he deemed to be incompatible with democratic principles.

In 2023 and 2024, Thai courts <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODMmZD1sMWg4ZTd5.P6n1Y1zyo1gYrF9eUf_dMbHDE5VLiTaCEprL4DcCwfA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737883">denied</a> multiple requests by Pimsiri Petchnamrob to travel abroad for international advocacy meetings, providing no clear justifications for these decisions. Appeals to higher courts were either rejected or dismissed. These restrictions are part of the conditions imposed following Pimsiri Petchnamrob’s <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODQmZD1lOGk1eTB6.OViIMXIv9ryirTHuM7XVgBrVRKnqAa3--NKrG6NEHq8" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737884">indictment</a> on 25 November 2021 under the above-referenced charges. The same day of the indictment, she was granted temporary bail on condition that she refrains from defaming the Thai monarchy and from traveling abroad without the court’s approval.

The Observatory <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODUmZD1zOWQydDlk.5-D2QCOa5Z6Zk_SupfnMU-RrXFo19Cp1e6S1ffbhro4" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737885">notes</a> with concern that, according to the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights (TLHR), between 19 November 2020 and 13 June 2025 at least 280 persons, including many human rights defenders and 20 minors, were charged under Article 112 of the Criminal Code. 17 of them are currently detained pending trial or appeal, and 14 more are serving prison sentences. On 28 May 2025, lawyer and pro-democracy activist <strong>Anon Nampa </strong><a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODYmZD1yN3I2YzZs.1VQBJxe5CQ9K-ZZ4LwDLXKLMz05bYu203k4e3XwP4uM" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737886">was convicted</a> for the eighth time under “lèse-majesté,” and is serving now a total prison term of over 24 years. On 14 May 2024, youth activist <strong>“Bung” Thaluwang</strong>, arbitrarily held in pre-trial detention under “lèse-majesté”, <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODcmZD1mOXI3YTdo.BQ8xaK5bRhgHle__1UfAb09oojKQjecEjsBCcRC2dp8" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737887">died in custody</a> after a prolonged hunger strike that ended in April 2024.

The Observatory strongly condemns these acts of judicial harassment including prosecution, conviction, sentencing, and continued arbitrary detention and imprisonment of human rights defenders in Thailand. The ongoing prosecution against Pimsiri Petchnamrob appears to be solely related to her legitimate human rights activities and the exercise of her rights to freedom of expression and of peaceful assembly.

The Observatory urges Thai authorities to immediately and unconditionally put an end to all forms of judicial harassment against Pimsiri Petchnamrob and all other human rights defenders, notably under “lèse-majesté” charges, and to release all those arbitrarily detained in the country.

<em><a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote1anc">1</a>Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code imposes jail terms of three to 15 years for those found guilty of defaming, insulting, or threatening the King, the Queen, the Heir to the throne, or the Regent.</em>

<em><a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote2anc">2</a> On 25 March 2020, the government declared a State of Emergency pursuant to Article 5 of the 2005 Emergency Decree in an eﬀort to control the spread of COVID-19. Under Article 18, violations of the Emergency Decree carry penalties of up to two years’ imprisonment or a fine of up to 40,000 Baht (US$1,225). It was renewed numerous times, with the last extension valid until 30 September 2022.</em>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[The Observatory has been informed about the ongoing legal proceedings against Ms <strong>Pimsiri Petchnamrob</strong>, a <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4NzkmZD13NnExcTVh.TmAvIMdZ-ywciRNdEb_siraasqLWCAIPzOsn4L34HUE" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737879">prominent pro-democracy activist</a> from Bangkok, who is being prosecuted and tried for “lèse-majesté”. She has been working as an advocate for human rights and equality and served as the Thailand Program Officer for ARTICLE 19, an international non-governmental organisation that works on freedom of expression and information.

The first hearings in Pimsiri Petchnamrob’s case were held from 4 to 6 June 2025 at the Bangkok Criminal Court and are scheduled to continue from 17 to 20 June and on 24 and 25 June 2025. Pimsiri Petchnamrob has been charged under Articles 112<a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote1sym">1</a> (“lèse-majesté”), 116 (“sedition”), and 215–216 (“failure to disperse illegal assembly”) of the Criminal Code as well as under the Emergency Decree<a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote2sym">2</a> and the Public Assembly Act of 2015. All these charges are related to a speech she gave on 29 November 2020 <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODImZD1sN3ozYzRj.ECakiVGkLlXRbqLYOVnaJXeatBWwHXJE3csv3tTRcKI" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737882">in front</a> of the Thai Army’s 11th Infantry Regiment King’s Guard in Bangkok during a peaceful pro-democracy demonstration, in which she cited a statement made in 2017 by the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression criticising the ‘‘lèse-majesté’’ provision of the Criminal Code.

Pimsiri Petchnamrob denies all charges, maintaining that she did not advocate for monarchy reform or make personal remarks about members of the Thai royal family, but only quoted the UN Special Rapporteur’s critique of Thailand’s ‘‘lèse-majesté’’, which he deemed to be incompatible with democratic principles.

In 2023 and 2024, Thai courts <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODMmZD1sMWg4ZTd5.P6n1Y1zyo1gYrF9eUf_dMbHDE5VLiTaCEprL4DcCwfA" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737883">denied</a> multiple requests by Pimsiri Petchnamrob to travel abroad for international advocacy meetings, providing no clear justifications for these decisions. Appeals to higher courts were either rejected or dismissed. These restrictions are part of the conditions imposed following Pimsiri Petchnamrob’s <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODQmZD1lOGk1eTB6.OViIMXIv9ryirTHuM7XVgBrVRKnqAa3--NKrG6NEHq8" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737884">indictment</a> on 25 November 2021 under the above-referenced charges. The same day of the indictment, she was granted temporary bail on condition that she refrains from defaming the Thai monarchy and from traveling abroad without the court’s approval.

The Observatory <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODUmZD1zOWQydDlk.5-D2QCOa5Z6Zk_SupfnMU-RrXFo19Cp1e6S1ffbhro4" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737885">notes</a> with concern that, according to the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights (TLHR), between 19 November 2020 and 13 June 2025 at least 280 persons, including many human rights defenders and 20 minors, were charged under Article 112 of the Criminal Code. 17 of them are currently detained pending trial or appeal, and 14 more are serving prison sentences. On 28 May 2025, lawyer and pro-democracy activist <strong>Anon Nampa </strong><a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODYmZD1yN3I2YzZs.1VQBJxe5CQ9K-ZZ4LwDLXKLMz05bYu203k4e3XwP4uM" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737886">was convicted</a> for the eighth time under “lèse-majesté,” and is serving now a total prison term of over 24 years. On 14 May 2024, youth activist <strong>“Bung” Thaluwang</strong>, arbitrarily held in pre-trial detention under “lèse-majesté”, <a href="https://click.mailerlite.com/link/c/YT0yNzY4NDY4OTM4MjczNTkzMDk1JmM9ZDFoOSZiPTE0NTI3Mzc4ODcmZD1mOXI3YTdo.BQ8xaK5bRhgHle__1UfAb09oojKQjecEjsBCcRC2dp8" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1452737887">died in custody</a> after a prolonged hunger strike that ended in April 2024.

The Observatory strongly condemns these acts of judicial harassment including prosecution, conviction, sentencing, and continued arbitrary detention and imprisonment of human rights defenders in Thailand. The ongoing prosecution against Pimsiri Petchnamrob appears to be solely related to her legitimate human rights activities and the exercise of her rights to freedom of expression and of peaceful assembly.

The Observatory urges Thai authorities to immediately and unconditionally put an end to all forms of judicial harassment against Pimsiri Petchnamrob and all other human rights defenders, notably under “lèse-majesté” charges, and to release all those arbitrarily detained in the country.

<em><a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote1anc">1</a>Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code imposes jail terms of three to 15 years for those found guilty of defaming, insulting, or threatening the King, the Queen, the Heir to the throne, or the Regent.</em>

<em><a href="https://preview.mailerlite.com/h3x6l5g7d3/2768468938273593095/d1h9/#sdfootnote2anc">2</a> On 25 March 2020, the government declared a State of Emergency pursuant to Article 5 of the 2005 Emergency Decree in an eﬀort to control the spread of COVID-19. Under Article 18, violations of the Emergency Decree carry penalties of up to two years’ imprisonment or a fine of up to 40,000 Baht (US$1,225). It was renewed numerous times, with the last extension valid until 30 September 2022.</em>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Pakistan: The authorities must end crackdown on Baloch human rights defenders</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/pakistan-the-authorities-must-end-crackdown-on-baloch-human-rights-defenders/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[observatory_admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 May 2025 15:10:56 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=23518</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[27 May 2025

Respected Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif,

We, the undersigned five human rights organisations, strongly condemn the harassment and arbitrary detention of Baloch human rights defenders (HRDs) exercising their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly in Pakistan, particularly in Balochistan province. The actions of your government to systematically harass and detain HRDs, raising their voice against enforced disappearances and other unlawful state practices, run afoul of Pakistan’s international human rights obligations.

Pakistan authorities must end the systematic targeting and harassment of the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC), a peaceful grassroots movement that has mobilised thousands to demand justice, accountability, and an end to enforced disappearances. The attacks on BYC leaders and supporters, who are peacefully exercising their rights to freedom of expression and assembly, not only violates Pakistan’s constitution but also its international legal obligations.

The authorities have consistently weaponised the public order and anti-terror laws to criminalise Baloch civic resistance and unlawfully detain BYC leaders and members. Laws like the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance, 1960 (MPO), Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act, 2016 and Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and tactics such as travel bans have been repeatedly instrumentalised to silence peaceful dissent, marking a dangerous erosion of the rule of law.

Pakistan authorities have carried out a series of enforced disappearances and arbitrary detentions since 20 March against HRDs and many remain in detention for over two months. The reprisals are in the aftermath of a militant attack on a the Jaffar Express passenger train in Balochistan on 11 March. HRD and BYC central committee member <strong>Bebarg Zehri</strong> and another HRD were arrested on 20 March. Bebarg Zehri, a person with disability, remains detained to date under the MPO—a law which has been used against most of the detained Baloch activists and restricts access to bail. On 21 March, Balochistan police opened fire on peaceful protesters who were calling for his release. Three people were killed and at least seven injured due to police violence against protesters. In the early hours of 22 March, woman human rights defenders (WHRDs), <strong>Mahrang Baloch</strong> and <strong>Beebow Baloch</strong>, were arrested from a peaceful sit-in in Quetta against police violence and calling for Bebarg’s release. The women are detained at the Hudda Jail, Quetta under the MPO. For several hours following their arrest, there was no information about their whereabouts, and the WHRDs were denied access to legal counsel of family members causing concern for their safety, a pattern which is repeated in many of the arrests of Baloch HRDs and family members. Family members have also repeatedly raised concerns regarding detention conditions and lack of access to adequate medical facilities.

On 24 March, BYC leader <strong>Sammi Deen Baloch</strong> and several other HRDs were arrested during a peaceful demonstration in Karachi against the targeting of BYC members and HRDs. Despite being granted bail by a judicial magistrate in Karachi the following day (25 March), Sammi Deen Baloch was re-arrested under the MPO, a deliberate strategy to prevent release and prolong detention by several means. These harassment tactics reflect the intention of Pakistan authorities to intimidate and dismantle the BYC and the work of Baloch HRDs. On 1 April, Sammi Deen Baloch was released following a decision by the Sindh government to remove her name from the MPO detention order. On 18 April, the home of <strong>Israr Baloch</strong> – a lawyer in Quetta representing BYC HRDs – was raided and law enforcement officers threatened his family with consequences if Israr did not stop his human rights work. The authorities also moved WHRD Beebow Baloch from Hudda Jail to Pishin Prison on 23 April where her medical condition severely deteriorated. After being transferred to a hospital on 2 May she was sent back to Hudda Jail, despite her condition not having improved. Her family has reported that she was subject to physical torture while being moved.

The Balochistan authorities continued the crackdown on the BYC leadership and members by arresting human rights defenders <strong>Shah Jee Sibghat Ullah</strong> on 30 March and <strong>Gulzadi Baloch</strong> on 7 April, and by detaining family members of other BYC leaders as part of a pattern of intimidation of activists to psychologically and socially pressure HRDs into silence. WHRD <strong>Sabiha Baloch</strong>, whose father was detained on 5 April and his whereabouts remain unknown, faces threat of imminent arrest on baseless charges. Participants of a peaceful protest organised by BYC on 25 April in Karachi were subject to arbitrary detention on charges of unlawful assembly, public nuisance, and sedition. Similarly on 20 May, 20 protesters in Quetta were detained by security forces and 5 remain under arrest after they gathered for a peaceful protest.

This severe crackdown on Baloch activists violates Pakistan’s international human rights obligations and its own Constitutional safeguards. The Pakistani Constitution guarantees the right to assemble peacefully under Article 16 and the right to freedom of speech and expression under Article 19. Article 10 provides the right to life and liberty and Article 10A the right to fair trial and due process. Pakistan has ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), and in its treaty body review last year the Human Rights Committee expressed concerns about the frequent use of the Exit Control Lists, particularly in late 2024, and the Anti-Terrorism Act to arbitrarily restrict the freedom of movement of dissenting persons, including WHRDs such as Sammi Deen Baloch and Mahrang Baloch. The BYC and Baloch HRDs follow a non-violent, rights based approach, and the crackdown on their work including false criminalisation erodes space for meaningful engagement with human rights and the rights of the Baloch community.

These developments come against a backdrop of harassment of journalists and a clampdown on freedom of expression. In March, journalist <strong>Waheed Murad</strong> was arrested simply for reporting on a statement by a Baloch politician. Last month, a case was filed under the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act against advocate <strong>Jalila Haider</strong> for expressing online support for Mahrang Baloch. On 24 May, Baloch journalist <strong>Abdul Latif Baloch</strong>, who reported on enforced disappearances, was shot dead at his family home during an alleged attempted abduction. His son previously disappeared and was found dead a few months ago. Frequent internet shutdowns in Balochistan further compromise the free flow of information and has worsened the security situation for HRDs, their families and at-risk communities. Digital censorship, internet shutdowns, surveillance and other forms of restriction on freedom of expression are yet another core tactic of silencing dissent and further isolating and endangering Baloch voices.

It is imperative that human rights are upheld and never sacrificed in the name of security.

<strong>We call on the Pakistani authorities to:</strong>
- Immediately and unconditionally release all Baloch HRDs and their family members arbitrarily detained solely for peacefully exercising their rights in line with the right to liberty and safety.
- Drop all charges against HRDs based solely on the exercise of their rights.
- Pending their release, ensure the safety of HRDs and family members, including by sharing accurate information about their whereabouts, providing effective access to family members, legal counsel and medical treatment.
- Conduct a thorough, impartial, effective and transparent investigation into the allegations of torture and mistreatment by Pakistani authorities of Baloch HRDs under detention.
- End the crackdown against HRDs, journalists, protesters and dissidents by ensuring their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly are fully protected.
- Cease all forms of reprisals against family members of HRDs.
- Conduct an effective, prompt, thorough and impartial investigation into the unlawful use of force against protesters on 21 March in Quetta and bring those suspected of responsibility to justice through fair trials.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[27 May 2025

Respected Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif,

We, the undersigned five human rights organisations, strongly condemn the harassment and arbitrary detention of Baloch human rights defenders (HRDs) exercising their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly in Pakistan, particularly in Balochistan province. The actions of your government to systematically harass and detain HRDs, raising their voice against enforced disappearances and other unlawful state practices, run afoul of Pakistan’s international human rights obligations.

Pakistan authorities must end the systematic targeting and harassment of the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC), a peaceful grassroots movement that has mobilised thousands to demand justice, accountability, and an end to enforced disappearances. The attacks on BYC leaders and supporters, who are peacefully exercising their rights to freedom of expression and assembly, not only violates Pakistan’s constitution but also its international legal obligations.

The authorities have consistently weaponised the public order and anti-terror laws to criminalise Baloch civic resistance and unlawfully detain BYC leaders and members. Laws like the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance, 1960 (MPO), Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act, 2016 and Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and tactics such as travel bans have been repeatedly instrumentalised to silence peaceful dissent, marking a dangerous erosion of the rule of law.

Pakistan authorities have carried out a series of enforced disappearances and arbitrary detentions since 20 March against HRDs and many remain in detention for over two months. The reprisals are in the aftermath of a militant attack on a the Jaffar Express passenger train in Balochistan on 11 March. HRD and BYC central committee member <strong>Bebarg Zehri</strong> and another HRD were arrested on 20 March. Bebarg Zehri, a person with disability, remains detained to date under the MPO—a law which has been used against most of the detained Baloch activists and restricts access to bail. On 21 March, Balochistan police opened fire on peaceful protesters who were calling for his release. Three people were killed and at least seven injured due to police violence against protesters. In the early hours of 22 March, woman human rights defenders (WHRDs), <strong>Mahrang Baloch</strong> and <strong>Beebow Baloch</strong>, were arrested from a peaceful sit-in in Quetta against police violence and calling for Bebarg’s release. The women are detained at the Hudda Jail, Quetta under the MPO. For several hours following their arrest, there was no information about their whereabouts, and the WHRDs were denied access to legal counsel of family members causing concern for their safety, a pattern which is repeated in many of the arrests of Baloch HRDs and family members. Family members have also repeatedly raised concerns regarding detention conditions and lack of access to adequate medical facilities.

On 24 March, BYC leader <strong>Sammi Deen Baloch</strong> and several other HRDs were arrested during a peaceful demonstration in Karachi against the targeting of BYC members and HRDs. Despite being granted bail by a judicial magistrate in Karachi the following day (25 March), Sammi Deen Baloch was re-arrested under the MPO, a deliberate strategy to prevent release and prolong detention by several means. These harassment tactics reflect the intention of Pakistan authorities to intimidate and dismantle the BYC and the work of Baloch HRDs. On 1 April, Sammi Deen Baloch was released following a decision by the Sindh government to remove her name from the MPO detention order. On 18 April, the home of <strong>Israr Baloch</strong> – a lawyer in Quetta representing BYC HRDs – was raided and law enforcement officers threatened his family with consequences if Israr did not stop his human rights work. The authorities also moved WHRD Beebow Baloch from Hudda Jail to Pishin Prison on 23 April where her medical condition severely deteriorated. After being transferred to a hospital on 2 May she was sent back to Hudda Jail, despite her condition not having improved. Her family has reported that she was subject to physical torture while being moved.

The Balochistan authorities continued the crackdown on the BYC leadership and members by arresting human rights defenders <strong>Shah Jee Sibghat Ullah</strong> on 30 March and <strong>Gulzadi Baloch</strong> on 7 April, and by detaining family members of other BYC leaders as part of a pattern of intimidation of activists to psychologically and socially pressure HRDs into silence. WHRD <strong>Sabiha Baloch</strong>, whose father was detained on 5 April and his whereabouts remain unknown, faces threat of imminent arrest on baseless charges. Participants of a peaceful protest organised by BYC on 25 April in Karachi were subject to arbitrary detention on charges of unlawful assembly, public nuisance, and sedition. Similarly on 20 May, 20 protesters in Quetta were detained by security forces and 5 remain under arrest after they gathered for a peaceful protest.

This severe crackdown on Baloch activists violates Pakistan’s international human rights obligations and its own Constitutional safeguards. The Pakistani Constitution guarantees the right to assemble peacefully under Article 16 and the right to freedom of speech and expression under Article 19. Article 10 provides the right to life and liberty and Article 10A the right to fair trial and due process. Pakistan has ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), and in its treaty body review last year the Human Rights Committee expressed concerns about the frequent use of the Exit Control Lists, particularly in late 2024, and the Anti-Terrorism Act to arbitrarily restrict the freedom of movement of dissenting persons, including WHRDs such as Sammi Deen Baloch and Mahrang Baloch. The BYC and Baloch HRDs follow a non-violent, rights based approach, and the crackdown on their work including false criminalisation erodes space for meaningful engagement with human rights and the rights of the Baloch community.

These developments come against a backdrop of harassment of journalists and a clampdown on freedom of expression. In March, journalist <strong>Waheed Murad</strong> was arrested simply for reporting on a statement by a Baloch politician. Last month, a case was filed under the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act against advocate <strong>Jalila Haider</strong> for expressing online support for Mahrang Baloch. On 24 May, Baloch journalist <strong>Abdul Latif Baloch</strong>, who reported on enforced disappearances, was shot dead at his family home during an alleged attempted abduction. His son previously disappeared and was found dead a few months ago. Frequent internet shutdowns in Balochistan further compromise the free flow of information and has worsened the security situation for HRDs, their families and at-risk communities. Digital censorship, internet shutdowns, surveillance and other forms of restriction on freedom of expression are yet another core tactic of silencing dissent and further isolating and endangering Baloch voices.

It is imperative that human rights are upheld and never sacrificed in the name of security.

<strong>We call on the Pakistani authorities to:</strong>
- Immediately and unconditionally release all Baloch HRDs and their family members arbitrarily detained solely for peacefully exercising their rights in line with the right to liberty and safety.
- Drop all charges against HRDs based solely on the exercise of their rights.
- Pending their release, ensure the safety of HRDs and family members, including by sharing accurate information about their whereabouts, providing effective access to family members, legal counsel and medical treatment.
- Conduct a thorough, impartial, effective and transparent investigation into the allegations of torture and mistreatment by Pakistani authorities of Baloch HRDs under detention.
- End the crackdown against HRDs, journalists, protesters and dissidents by ensuring their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly are fully protected.
- Cease all forms of reprisals against family members of HRDs.
- Conduct an effective, prompt, thorough and impartial investigation into the unlawful use of force against protesters on 21 March in Quetta and bring those suspected of responsibility to justice through fair trials.]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Egypt: Joint call to lift punitive measures against EIPR staff</title>
		<link>https://observatoryfordefenders.org/es/alert/egypt-joint-call-to-lift-punitive-measures-against-eipr-staff/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yasmine Louanchi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Dec 2024 18:48:48 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://observatoryfordefenders.org/?post_type=alert&#038;p=23303</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong><em>The Observatory (FIDH-OMCT) joins 32 human rights organisations in calling on the Egyptian government to lift arbitrary travel bans and asset freezes imposed on three directors of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), and to end the targeting of human rights defenders for their legitimate work.</em></strong>

December 4, 2024

The Egyptian government must immediately lift the arbitrary travel bans and asset freezes imposed upon three directors of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), a prominent Egyptian human rights organisation, solely for their legitimate human rights work, a coalition of 34 rights groups said today, four years after the men were released from prison following an international outcry at their persecution.

The then EIPR Executive Director <strong>Gasser Abdel Razek</strong>, Administrative Director <strong>Mohamed Bashir</strong>, and then Criminal Justice Unit Director <strong>Karim Ennarah</strong> were arrested between November 15-19, 2020. Following significant domestic and international pressure, the three were released on December 3, 2020 pending investigations in Case No 855/200.

However, upon their release all three men had travel bans imposed on them, preventing them from leaving the country, and on December 6, 2020, their assets were frozen by the Anti-Terrorism Circuit of the Cairo Criminal Court. Since then, four years after the court's decision, neither they or their lawyers have been allowed to access case documents for Case No. 855/2020, under which they were accused of offences such as joining a terrorist group and spreading false news. The authorities have never produced any evidence for these baseless charges. On December 7, 2020, a group of <a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2020/12/egypt-bail-eipr-staff-encouraging-first-step-un-experts" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888355">UN experts</a> stated in relation to the case that, “no human rights defender should face financial restrictions, criminalisation, bail conditions or be imprisoned for their legitimate human rights work.”

EIPR has submitted multiple appeals to the courts regarding these punitive measures, including <a href="https://eipr.org/en/press/2024/11/after-four-years-persecution-its-directors-eipr-files-complaint-supreme-judicial" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888357">most recently to the Supreme Judicial Council</a>, but, in violation of Egyptian law, have not been granted any court session to challenge them.

In April this year, the Egyptian government closed Case 173 of 2011, the notorious “civil society organisations case”, after 13 years, leading to the lifting of travel bans and asset freezes against a number of civil society representatives, including EIPR current executive director <strong>Hossam Bahgat</strong>. However, as Abdel Razek, Bashir and Ennarah were arrested and prosecuted in a separate case, this decision had no effect on them.

Egypt continues to witness a protracted human rights crisis fuelled by impunity and disregard to rule of law. Egyptian civil society organisations and NGO workers continue to face severe repression from the authorities, including arbitrary detentions and unjust convictions, a restrictive NGO law, and widespread restrictions on their rights to freedom of association, peaceful assembly, and expression. In recent months, authorities have taken steps to amend the Criminal Procedures Law, which the Egyptian authorities are <a href="https://eipr.org/en/press/2024/11/after-four-years-persecution-its-directors-eipr-files-complaint-supreme-judicial" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888359">already violating</a> in the ongoing case against the EIPR staff. Egyptian and international human rights groups have raised serious concerns about this draft law further enabling violations of fair trials, and <a href="https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/TMResultsBase/DownLoadPublicCommunicationFile?gId=29467" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888361">according to</a> several UN special procedures mandate holders, “some of the amendments seem to violate provisions of the Egyptian Constitution and thereby undermine constitutionally protected rights and freedoms.”

In January 2025, Egypt will have its human rights record examined by other governments at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, in what is known as the Universal Periodic Review (UPR).

The organisations call upon States that will make recommendations to the Egyptian government in a dedicated session on January 28, 2025, to ensure that they use the opportunity to call for the lifting of all travel bans, asset freezes and other punitive measures against human rights defenders, including EIPR’s staff members, and to end the targeting of human rights defenders and human rights organisations solely for their legitimate work.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong><em>The Observatory (FIDH-OMCT) joins 32 human rights organisations in calling on the Egyptian government to lift arbitrary travel bans and asset freezes imposed on three directors of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), and to end the targeting of human rights defenders for their legitimate work.</em></strong>

December 4, 2024

The Egyptian government must immediately lift the arbitrary travel bans and asset freezes imposed upon three directors of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), a prominent Egyptian human rights organisation, solely for their legitimate human rights work, a coalition of 34 rights groups said today, four years after the men were released from prison following an international outcry at their persecution.

The then EIPR Executive Director <strong>Gasser Abdel Razek</strong>, Administrative Director <strong>Mohamed Bashir</strong>, and then Criminal Justice Unit Director <strong>Karim Ennarah</strong> were arrested between November 15-19, 2020. Following significant domestic and international pressure, the three were released on December 3, 2020 pending investigations in Case No 855/200.

However, upon their release all three men had travel bans imposed on them, preventing them from leaving the country, and on December 6, 2020, their assets were frozen by the Anti-Terrorism Circuit of the Cairo Criminal Court. Since then, four years after the court's decision, neither they or their lawyers have been allowed to access case documents for Case No. 855/2020, under which they were accused of offences such as joining a terrorist group and spreading false news. The authorities have never produced any evidence for these baseless charges. On December 7, 2020, a group of <a href="https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2020/12/egypt-bail-eipr-staff-encouraging-first-step-un-experts" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888355">UN experts</a> stated in relation to the case that, “no human rights defender should face financial restrictions, criminalisation, bail conditions or be imprisoned for their legitimate human rights work.”

EIPR has submitted multiple appeals to the courts regarding these punitive measures, including <a href="https://eipr.org/en/press/2024/11/after-four-years-persecution-its-directors-eipr-files-complaint-supreme-judicial" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888357">most recently to the Supreme Judicial Council</a>, but, in violation of Egyptian law, have not been granted any court session to challenge them.

In April this year, the Egyptian government closed Case 173 of 2011, the notorious “civil society organisations case”, after 13 years, leading to the lifting of travel bans and asset freezes against a number of civil society representatives, including EIPR current executive director <strong>Hossam Bahgat</strong>. However, as Abdel Razek, Bashir and Ennarah were arrested and prosecuted in a separate case, this decision had no effect on them.

Egypt continues to witness a protracted human rights crisis fuelled by impunity and disregard to rule of law. Egyptian civil society organisations and NGO workers continue to face severe repression from the authorities, including arbitrary detentions and unjust convictions, a restrictive NGO law, and widespread restrictions on their rights to freedom of association, peaceful assembly, and expression. In recent months, authorities have taken steps to amend the Criminal Procedures Law, which the Egyptian authorities are <a href="https://eipr.org/en/press/2024/11/after-four-years-persecution-its-directors-eipr-files-complaint-supreme-judicial" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888359">already violating</a> in the ongoing case against the EIPR staff. Egyptian and international human rights groups have raised serious concerns about this draft law further enabling violations of fair trials, and <a href="https://spcommreports.ohchr.org/TMResultsBase/DownLoadPublicCommunicationFile?gId=29467" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-link-id="1392888361">according to</a> several UN special procedures mandate holders, “some of the amendments seem to violate provisions of the Egyptian Constitution and thereby undermine constitutionally protected rights and freedoms.”

In January 2025, Egypt will have its human rights record examined by other governments at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, in what is known as the Universal Periodic Review (UPR).

The organisations call upon States that will make recommendations to the Egyptian government in a dedicated session on January 28, 2025, to ensure that they use the opportunity to call for the lifting of all travel bans, asset freezes and other punitive measures against human rights defenders, including EIPR’s staff members, and to end the targeting of human rights defenders and human rights organisations solely for their legitimate work.]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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