Tunisian government denies passport to CPJ representative
New York, January 2, 2008—The Committee to Protect Journalists today condemned the Tunisian government’s denial of a passport to Kamel Labidi, a freelance Tunisian journalist and CPJ’s Middle East representative.
On July 17, Labidi, a Tunisian national, applied for a new passport at the Tunisian Embassy in Washington after losing his old one. A representative at the embassy informed him that the passport would be replaced in a matter of days. However, more than five months later and after repeated calls to the embassy from Labidi and CPJ, his passport has yet to be replaced.
Embassy staff has claimed that his passport is awaiting approval from the Tunisian Interior Ministry. Tunisia’s Ambassador to Washington, Mohamed Najib Hachana, has not returned repeated phone calls or responded to a written request for information from CPJ about the embassy’s failure to provide Labidi with a new passport.
“Denying our colleague his right to travel is petty and vindictive and is further evidence of the Tunisian government’s utter contempt for independent journalism and free expression,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “We call on the Tunisian government to provide Kamel Labidi with his passport at once and to do the same for others similarly denied.”
Tunisian authorities frequently deny passports to critical journalists and human rights activists in retaliation for their outspoken views. The government has refused to give a passport to independent journalist Slim Boukhdir, a freelancer known for his criticism of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and members of the first family. Earlier this month Boukhdir was sent to jail for a year on trumped-up charges of allegedly verbally assaulting a public employee and violating public decency.
Labidi’s passport was previously confiscated by the government for six months in 1996 without any explanation, although the apparent reason was his reporting about human rights violations in Tunisia.
While on assignment for CPJ in Cairo in 2006, Labidi received harassing phone calls from a man Egyptian journalists and human rights activists identified as a plainclothes Tunisian agent working out of the Tunisian Embassy in Cairo.
Tunisia’s press is among the most restricted in the Arab world. Since coming to power 20 years ago, President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali has virtually eradicated independent journalism from the country. Most newspapers are devoid of any criticism of the government and offer hagiographic coverage of Ben Ali. The government actively harasses the few independent journalists who attempt to write critically of the government—mostly online or for foreign newspapers. Censorship, surveillance, harassment, and violent attacks on critics are common.
http://www.cpj.org/news/2008/mideast/tunisia02jan08na.html

Ya Kamal Labidi arrete tes tracts politiques a la cons. Va bosser chez Aljazeera ou dans n’importe quel autre media de propagandes si c’est ca se qui t’ambitionnes. Cesse de polluer les journaux des Occidentaux avec tes mesquineries et tes scenarios tires par les cheveux. On dirait que ton probleme de passeport est le probleme de tout les Tunisiens …
Comment by Tunisien — February 27, 2008 @ 6:38 pm
am a tunisian and i have the same problem for the last nine years i hv a small judicial problem (cheques sans provisions)i been running from 16 years jail just bcoz of some small cheques not amounting to 10.000 dinars ,now am residing in malaysia am living in fear i can’t do anything am a professional educated i can work easily if i had documents ,please advice .thanks
Comment by cherif — June 13, 2008 @ 3:17 pm