Yemen

Active Cases

Yemen – Release of human rights defender while others remain in detention

Update

Front Line welcomes the release of human rights defender, Khalid Abdul-Wahab El-Sharif from prison on Friday 19 December. He had been detained since 5 July 2008 in the Political Security Prison, San´a, where he had been denied legal consultation, regular visits and was never officially charged. Despite his release, Front Line remains deeply concerned about the ongoing detention without charge of human rights defenders, Mr Yasre Abdul-Wahab Al-Wazeer and Mr Mu’een Ibraheem Al-Mutawakel.  Read More

Yemen - Travel ban on journalist and human rights defender, Abdul-Karim al-Khaiwani

Front Line is concerned following reports that human rights defender and journalist, Abdul-Karim al-Khaiwani, was banned from travelling to a human rights conference on 30 November 2008 despite receiving a presidential pardon on 25 September 2008 for all charges held against him. Abdul-Karim al-Khaiwani is the former Editor-in-Chief of the pro-democracy online newspaper, Al-Shoura, and a campaigner for the right to freedom of expression in Yemen.  Read More

Human rights defenders in Yemen have been subjected to harassment, death threats, arbitrary detention, fabricated prosecutions and torture including corporal punishment.The Yemeni constitution states that freedom of speech and of the press is guaranteed within the confines of the law. However, human rights defenders and pro-democracy advocates have been the victims of this provision's ambiguity. Journalists, HRDs and academics are treated with suspicion and the Security Police have abducted HRDs at gun point and kept them in incommunicado.

The Yemeni government has been sought to position itself as supporting the US government in its “war on terror.” Many HRDs have been arrested under the false accusation of supporting militant groups. Much of the progress achieved by HRDs in the years preceding 9/ll was undermined after tough legislation was introduced by the Yemini authorities in 2001. For example, the parliament approved the law for Associations and Foundations, which regulates the formation of NGOs. The constitution allows for freedom of assembly, yet it will routinely detain activists in order to prevent them from organizing demonstrations. The authorities hope to curtail the activities of human rights defenders by using both bureaucratic means as well as physical/psychological intimidation.

Communication between HRDs is problematic as the authorities monitor the internet and block websites. Journalists advocating reform run the risk of having their newspaper offices shut and their property confiscated. In June 2008, the former editor-and-chief of the pro-democracy paper al-Shoura, Abdulkarim Al-Khaiwani, was sentenced to six years imprisonment, after he was accused of insulting the president and “demoralizing the military”. His newspaper's office had to close and its website was blocked. The following month, journalists and human rights activists tried to stage a sit-in in the capital Sana'a, but it was shortly broken up, as the authorities subjected its participants to beatings and conducted arbitrary arrests.