Use our pull-down menus to find more stories
  


OR subscribers use AllAfrica's premium search engine


Click here to read or make comments on this topic »

Morocco: Journalist Mostapha Hurmatallah Released On Completing His Prison Sentence


 

Email This Page

Print This Page

Comment on this article

Visit The Publisher's Site

Reporters sans Frontières (Paris)

PRESS RELEASE
28 July 2008
Posted to the web 29 July 2008

Reporters Without Borders notes that reporter Mostapha Hurmatallah of the weekly "Al Watan Al An" was freed on 25 July 2008 on completing his prison sentence. He had been in Casablanca's Oukacha prison since 19 February, when Morocco's highest court of appeal ordered him to go back to jail to serve the rest of a seven-month term.

"We welcome Hurmatallah's release with joy, but we reiterate our firm condemnation of the original decision to imprison him just for doing his job," Reporters Without Borders said. "We now hope that this is the end of the era when people are jailed in Morocco because of what they write."

Hurmatallah, whose request for a royal pardon was ignored, told Reporters Without Borders that conditions in prison were very harsh. He was put in a cell with convicted criminals and his visits were restricted. He added that he nonetheless hoped that he would be the last journalist to be jailed in his country in connection with their work.

He was initially sentenced on 15 August 2007 to eight months in prison on a charge of "receiving documents obtained by criminal means" in connection with a special report about a state of alert in the 14 July 2007 issue of "Al Watan Al An".

The following month his sentence was reduced to seven months and he was released provisionally. However, he was returned to prison in February after the country's highest court rejected his appeal.

His release means that there are no journalists currently in prison in Morocco.

MORE INFORMATION:

Relevant Links

Updates the Hurmatallah case: http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/93317



AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

 
Share this on:
Facebook
Digg
Del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Muti


Copyright © 2008 Reporters sans Frontières. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com). To contact the copyright holder directly for corrections -- or for permission to republish or make other authorized use of this material, click here.

Make allAfrica.com your home page | RSS Feed

Top | Site Guide | Who We Are | Advertising | Search | Subscribe

Questions or Comments? Contact us. Read our Privacy Statement.

HOME
allAfrica.com


Relevant Links




LRA Elements Commit Grave Human Rights Violations
UN Reports Mounting Human Rights Abuses
It's Been a Decade of Promoting Rights, Says UHRC's Sekaggya
How a Mother Lacerates Her Little Daughter's Vagina With Razor Blade After Being Raped
Former Minister Pleads Not Guilty to Genocide