Somalia jails alleged rape victim, journalist for one year

| 5th February, 2013
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Somali journalists simulate an arrest protest for their colleage, Abdiaziz Abdinor Ibrahim, who was arrested and accused of reporting a false rape and giving the woman a bribe to lie. - Photo by AFP

Somali journalists simulate an arrest protest for their colleage, Abdiaziz Abdinor Ibrahim, who was arrested and accused of reporting a false rape and giving the woman a bribe to lie. – Photo by AFP

MOGADISHU: The Somali government arrested a woman who said she was raped by security forces, and a journalist who interviewed her, Tuesday, on charges of insulting the state.

“We sentence her for offending state institutions by claiming she was raped,” judge Ahmed Adan told the court in the capital Mogadishu. “She will spend one year in prison after finishing the breast feeding of her baby.”

Freelance journalist Abdiaziz Abdinur Ibrahim, who is already in detention, is to begin serving his sentence immediately.

“The court finds that he offended state institutions by making a false interview, and entering the house of a woman whose husband was not present,”the judge added.

Rights groups have condemned the case as “politically motivated”.

Three other defendants, including the husband of the alleged victim, and a man and woman who helped introduce her to the journalist, were found not guilty and released.

The reporter, who works for several Somali radio stations as well as international media, was detained on January 10 in Mogadishu after researching rampant sexual violence in Somalia.

The United Nations said it had “raised concerns” at the treatment of those arrested, noting the “prolonged detention” and initial lack of access to legal advice “could negatively impact” the trial.

Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the Committee to Protect Journalists have said in a joint statement that the case is “linked to increasing media attention given to the high levels of rape… including attacks allegedly committed by security forces”.

Somalia, which has been ravaged by relentless conflict since 1991, chose a new administration in September last year, in a UN-backed process, ending eight years of transitional rule by a corruption-riddled government.

Many have hailed the new government for offering hope, as it will be the first effective administration since the fall of president Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

Last week, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud visited the European Union, issuing a joint statement with the bloc’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton claiming that “a new Somalia is defying the cynicism of outsiders”.

Somalia needs “a justice system offering fair access to all”, the statement said, warning that “without security for every Somali citizen there will not be the rule of law and the space for economic development”.

But HRW said that bringing a case against a woman who alleges rape “makes a mockery” of such rhetoric, calling it a “politically motivated attempt to blame and silence those who report on the pervasive problem of sexual violence by Somali security forces”.

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