Current:Home > MyAlgeria passes law to protect media freedom. Others used to imprison journalists remain on the books -AssetLink
Algeria passes law to protect media freedom. Others used to imprison journalists remain on the books
View
Date:2025-04-24 10:47:33
ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Algeria’s National Council on Tuesday passed a new media law that officials hailed as a major victory for the country’s journalists as concerns about press freedoms have plagued President Abdelmajid Tebboune’s first term in office.
The new law repeals the country’s “press offense” law and enshrines new protections for journalists to ensure they will not face arrest or imprisonment for doing their jobs. However, two prominent journalists remain behind bars and the laws that authorities have used to prosecute journalists — including one banning foreign funding for media outlets — remain on the books.
Still, the law’s author, Algerian Minister of Communications Mohamed Laagab, called it “the best law in the history of independent Algeria regarding the journalism industry.” He said it was a directive that came from President Tebboune.
Many journalists hailed the law as major progress. Some responded with more caution.
Retired journalist and veteran political activist Ahmed Khezzana said he welcomed the law but wondered why Tebboune’s administration had decided to champion it now, after years of imprisoning journalists including Khaled Drareni and Ihsane El Kadi.
“I don’t think it’s a conviction on the part of those in power, who don’t fundamentally believe in press freedom. It’s just that the prospect of the presidential election is approaching, so they need to look after their image,” Khezzana said.
The overture to Algeria’s once vibrant, now fledgling journalism sector comes a year before Tebboune campaigns for reelection.
The two cases Khezzana referenced garnered Algeria international condemnation.
Drareni, a former editor of Casbah Tribune and correspondent for France’s TV5 Monde, was arrested and sentenced to prison in 2020 for inciting protests and attacking national unity. He was later pardoned and now works for Reporters Without Borders (RSF) as its North Africa representative. El Kadi, the owner of a media company that oversaw the now-shuttered news site Maghreb Emergent and radio station Radio M, remains behind bars on similar charges related to threatening state security and taking foreign funds for his outlets.
El Kadi’s lawyer, Fetta Sadat, told The Associated Press, that he thought the new law was unlikely to affect his client’s seven year sentence handed down in April.
Throughout Tebboune’s tenure, in addition to journalists facing prison sentences, the country’s largest French language newspaper Liberte, shuttered. Several news sites also have gone offline while others remain inaccessible throughout the country without VPN.
Repealing Algeria’s “press offense” law has been under discussion in parliament for more than a decade. It was first enshrined into national law in 2011 but put on hold as the country continued to use it to prosecute journalists who wrote critically of the government, particuLarly during the 2019 Hirak protests that led to former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s ouster.
The law has served as a pretext to imprison several journalists, including El Kadi and Mustapha Bendjama, the editor-in-chief of the daily newspaper Le Provencal.
The new law will take effect when it’s published in the country’s official bulletin, at which time courts will no longer arbitrate what journalists can write. Afterward, the country’s professional journalism organizations — the Council of Ethics and Conduct, the Print Media Regulatory Authority and the Audiovisual Regulatory Authority — will regulate the profession.
veryGood! (1721)
Related
- Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
- Hailey Bieber Shares Timeline Update on Her Pregnancy
- No. 4 seed Evansville stuns East Carolina to reach NCAA baseball tournament super regionals
- More presidential candidates could be on North Carolina ballot with signature drives
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Budget season arrives in Pennsylvania Capitol as lawmakers prepare for debate over massive surplus
- Pat McAfee walks back profane statement he made while trying to praise Caitlin Clark
- Battle with Texas rancher ends, 249 'zombie deer' killed amid state's largest CWD outbreak
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- How Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Are Raising Daughter Lili Diana Out of the Spotlight
Ranking
- Jury finds man guilty of sending 17-year-old son to rob and kill rapper PnB Rock
- Felicity Actor Erich Anderson Dead at 67 After Private Cancer Battle
- Police probing deadly street party in Ohio believe drive-by shooter opened fire
- Michigan kills 31,000 Atlantic salmon after they catch disease at hatchery
- 3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
- Bruises are common. Here's why getting rid of one is easier said than done
- Rupert Murdoch marries for 5th time in ceremony at his California vineyard
- Soldiers killed by wrong way drunk driver in Washington state, authorities say
Recommendation
Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
A grant program for Black women business owners is discriminatory, appeals court rules
Rhys Hoskins sheds a tear, as he expected, in his return to Philly with the Brewers
MLB player Tucupita Marcano faces possible lifetime ban for alleged baseball bets, AP source says
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
74-year-old Nebraska woman pronounced dead, found to be alive, breathing at funeral home
Aubrey O'Day likens experience with Sean 'Diddy' Combs to 'childhood trauma'
Mother of airman killed by Florida deputy says his firing, alone, won’t cut it