Detained website editor in Mauritania now facing up to five years in prison

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has condemned the charges of “violating public decency”, “inciting crimes” and “publishing court statements still under the seal of confidentiality” that were brought against Hanevy Ould Dehah, the editor of the website Taqadoumy, on June 24. Dehah, who has been held since June 18, was taken to Dart Naim prison after being charged.

“We urge the authorities to explain the charges brought against Dehah, who has not yet been tried, and to produce evidence to support them,” Paris-based RSF said. “They are out of all proportion to the article that prompted his arrest. We suspect the authorities are using this prosecution to silence the website.”

Dehah faces a possible five-year jail sentence when he is brought to trial, which should be within the next month. He was arrested on June 18 at the behest of the orders of the Nouakchott prosecutor’s office as a result of a complaint by presidential candidate Ibrahima Moctar Sarr, the head of the opposition Alliance for Justice and Democracy/Movement for Renovation (AJD/MR), over an article posted on Taqadoumy on April 22.

Headlined “The sudden fortune of Ibrahima Sarr,” the article referred to “the purchase by Sarr of a villa costing 30 million ouguiyas [about 83,000 euros] on the Nouadhibou road in an area known as ‘university lands’, one of the capital’s most elegant neighbourhoods.” Sarr and his family described the article as “defamatory and baseless.”

 
 
Date Posted: 26 June 2009 Last Modified: 26 June 2009