April/May 2010 "Tunisia needs a truly independent judiciary to reverse its worsening record on human rights and treatment of prisoners of opinion." This is a key conclusion of the latest IFEX-TMG mission to Tunisia in April/May 2010. It draws from research and interviews during the IFEX-TMG's seventh mission to Tunisia, conducted between 25 April and 6 May 2010. The IFEX-TMG found that there had been a significant deterioration of human rights in Tunisia since the last IFEX-TMG mission in 2007. The report records a number of recurring cases of harassment, surveillance, and imprisonment of journalists and human rights activists some of whom have been detained in harsh conditions, physically harassed and dismissed from their jobs. Others have been denied their rights to communicate and move freely. The report culminates with 18 specific recommendations for change. A pot-pourri of administrative sanctions used to limit free expression and exert indirect pressure on journalists and human rights defenders are also addressed. These include denying licences to independent and opposition media, the harassment of critical journalists and human rights defenders and the confiscation of publications. Another chapter analyses the tactics the Tunisian authorities have employed in an effort to prevent the emergence of an independent judiciary, in spite of its national and international obligations.
January 2005 From 14 to 19 January 2005, six members of the IFEX-TMG conducted a fact-finding mission to Tunisia, where they met with writers, publishers, editors, journalists,
human rights defenders and academics, as well as government officials and government-sponsored organisations. The resulting report,
Tunisia: Freedom of Expression Under Siege, documented extensive censorship in the country, including: •
Imprisonment of individuals related to expression of their opinions or media activities. • Blocking of websites, including news and information websites, and police surveillance of e-mails and
Internet cafés. • Blocking of the distribution of books and publications. • Restrictions on the
freedom of association, including the right of organizations to be legally established and to hold meetings. • Restrictions on the freedom of movement of human rights defenders and political dissidents, police
surveillance, harassment, intimidation and interception of communications. • Lack of pluralism in
broadcast ownership, with only one private radio and one private TV broadcaster, both believed to be loyal supporters of President
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. • Press censorship and lack of diversity of content in newspapers. • Use of
torture by the security services with impunity.
September 2005 In September 2005, members of the IFEX-TMG returned to Tunisia to assess whether free expression conditions had improved since the first report. It found systematic censorship of newspapers and books; blocking of Internet sites; systematic surveillance of e-mails and telephones; denial of the right to legal accreditation of independent civil society associations; and threats against
freedom of assembly.
April 2006 Free expression violations in Tunisia continue to run rampant, six months after the government attracted controversy for muzzling civil society activists during the World Summit on the Information Society last November, according to a new report by the IFEX Tunisia Monitoring Group, which undertook a mission in April 2006.
April 2007 Following a mission to Tunisia in February and March 2007, the IFEX-TMG launched its fourth report – Freedom of Expression in Tunisia: The Siege Holds – in Cairo, Washington, Paris and Geneva. The report, available in English, French and Arabic, states: "a lack of positive change has led us to conclude that the Tunisian government has sought to further stifle dissidents since the previous TMG report of May 2006." ==Recommendations for the Tunisian government==