Lebanon: Prison Sentence Against Dima Sadek Denounced

Journalist Dima Sadek
Journalist Dima Sadek
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Lebanon: Prison Sentence Against Dima Sadek Denounced

Journalist Dima Sadek
Journalist Dima Sadek

A prison sentence issued against prominent journalist Dima Sadek had drawn condemnation in Lebanon.

Sadek was sentenced to a year in prison by a Beirut judge, after the head of the Free Patriotic Movement, MP Gebran Bassil, accused her of defamation and slander. The journalist, who plans to appeal, was also ordered to pay a fine of LBP110 million.

Bassil filed his lawsuit in 2020 after Sadek described FPM supporters as “Nazi-like” and racist after an attack, in the coastal town of Jounieh, on two men from the northern city of Tripoli.

The news of the verdict was widely denounced on social media.

Parliament’s Media and Communications Committee called on the judiciary to “seek justice and integrity without favoritism or politicization.”

The Syndicate of Lebanese Press Editors issued a statement, expressing its absolute rejection of the deprivation of freedom of any journalist, who committed a publishing violation, whether in print, audio or electronic means.

The head of the syndicate, Joseph Al-Qusaifi, told Asharq Al-Awsat: “The Court of Appeal must look at this issue from a different angle, so that it has two options: either dismiss the case or refer it to the Penal Code.”

For his part, lawyer, human rights activist and former deputy, Ghassan Mokheiber, considered that what happened with Sadek was a “precedent.”

“It is a precedent, yes, because even with crimes of slander and defamation, the courts issued financial fines, even if the law permitted imprisonment,” he said,

“There is a long and ongoing dispute over the competence of the ordinary criminal courts and the publications court. There is also a controversy on how to apply rulings related to writings through social media and all opinion crimes,” he added.



Algeria Tightens Measures to Combat Migrant Smuggling to Europe

A boat for illegal migration in the Mediterranean (circulated)
A boat for illegal migration in the Mediterranean (circulated)
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Algeria Tightens Measures to Combat Migrant Smuggling to Europe

A boat for illegal migration in the Mediterranean (circulated)
A boat for illegal migration in the Mediterranean (circulated)

Algerian authorities launched a new security unit last week to tackle human trafficking and migrant smuggling by sea from the country’s northern shores.

The unit, under the supervision of the Gendarmerie, was given broad powers and resources.

The Gendarmerie said on social media that the unit had dismantled two smuggling networks in Algiers, arrested 10 people, and seized seven boats used to transport migrants to southern Europe.

While the exact timing of the raids was not provided, the Gendarmerie mentioned that the networks were operating in Algiers, Blida (40 km west), and Ain Taya (30 km east).

The Gendarmerie said the new security unit was set up to combat organized crime, particularly illegal migration.

It noted that, through ongoing cooperation with other agencies, including the Birkhadem Investigation Unit and regional Gendarmerie teams in Algiers, three cases were handled.

These involved illegal crossings, mostly related to migrant smuggling, which is punishable under Algerian law. The Gendarmerie also seized boats worth $52,000 and a vehicle valued at around $30,000.

The Gendarmerie said it had referred members of two smuggling networks to the prosecution, without revealing their number. It stressed that efforts to tackle the issue, which has security, social, and economic impacts, would continue using all available resources.

Media reports confirmed that over 20 people were arrested. They had been charging up to 5,000 euros per person to smuggle migrants by sea to the nearest Spanish islands, a journey of 400 to 500 kilometers that takes about 24 hours in calm seas.

According to Spain’s EFE agency, 5,165 illegal migrants have reached the Balearic Islands since the start of the year, mostly from North Africa.

This represents a 100% increase from 2,278 migrants last year.