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For immediate release. Closure of Basque newspaper ‘Egunkaria’
ARTICLE 19 calls on court to follow international human rights standards
ARTICLE 19, the Global Campaign for Free Expression, is concerned at the news that Basque-language newspaper Euskaldunon Egunkaria remains unable to resume publication following its closure by the Spanish authorities in 2003, due to alleged links with the banned terrorist group ETA. Euskaldunon Egunkaria, established in 1990 as the first and only Basque-language daily newspaper, reportedly with a readership of 15,000 and widely respected throughout the Basque community, was raided by the authorities on 20 February 2003. On this occasion, documents and computers were seized, and the newspaper’s assets frozen. In addition, ten individuals who were or had been members of staff, including the newspaper’s managing director Iñaki Uria and former editor Pello Zubiria, were arrested in dawn raids and held incommunicado for up to five days.
1 In December 2004, Iñaki Uria, Joan Mari Torrealdai, Txema Auzmendi, Xabier Alegria, Pello Zubiria, Xabier Oleaga and Martxelo Otamendiwere for forming an ‘illegal association’ at the time of Euskaldunon Egunkaria’s establishment, and for “membership of, or collaboration with, ETA”.
Five of the detainees allege that they were subjected to torture while in police custody. The newspaper was also effectively forced into liquidation as its assets were sold off by Court-appointed administrators, meaning that, regardless the outcome of the case, Euskaldunon Egunkaria has ceased to exist.
Defence lawyers acting for the newspaper and for the seven indicted individuals allege that these claims are groundless, and that the evidence presented by the prosecution is circumstantial and inconclusive, and have appealed against the against the indictment. Their appeal will be heard by the Spanish National Criminal Court on 18 November 2005.
1 This is permissible under Spanish law. Page 2 ARTICLE 19 has serious doubts as to whether this action by the Spanish authorities is in conformity with internationally recognised principles relating to freedom of expression and national security.
One of the fundamental principles set out in the ‘Johannesburg Principles’, 2 which strike a balance between the right to freedom of expression and national security and have been endorsed by the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion and Expression 3 and recommended to States for their consideration by the UN Commission on Human Rights, 4 is that restrictions on freedom of expression in the name of national security may be imposed only where the speech was intended to incite imminent violence and there is a direct and immediate connection between the expression and the likelihood or occurrence of such violence. Principle 6 provides:
[E]xpression may be punished as a threat to national security only if a government can demonstrate that:
(a) the expression is intended to incite imminent violence; (b) it is likely to incite such violence; and (c) there is a direct and immediate connection between the expression and the likelihood or occurrence of such violence.
A similar standard has been embraced by the European Court of Human Rights. In Karata v. Turkey, the applicant had been convicted by the Turkish authorities for publishing poetry that allegedly glorified violence. The Court held that ‘condoning and glorifying terrorism’ as such is a legitimate exercise of the right to freedom of expression; only when glorification constitutes a clear call for violence can it be legitimately proscribed. 5
According to information available to ARTICLE 19, little evidence has been presented to prove the charges brought by the Prosecution, namely that the newspaper was established in 1990 to facilitate “the support and dissemination of the terrorist ideology and the values and interests” of ETA. More importantly, the definition of this offence fails to satisfy the requirements of the above-mentioned principle, that restrictions on freedom of expression are closely related to the prevention of actual harm to national security, instead of penalising a particular ideology or point of view, however repugnant it may seem.
ARTICLE 19 reminds the Spanish government and judiciary of Spain’s responsibility under international law to defend and promote the right of freedom of expression, resulting from its ratification of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the European Convention on Human Rights.
2 Johannesburg Principles on National Security, Freedom of Expression and Access to Information, adopted October 1995. 3 See, for example, UN Doc E/CN.4/1996/39, 22 March 1996, para. 154. 4 See UN Doc. E/CN.4/1996/53, 19 April 1996. The Johannesburg Principles have also been referred to by superior courts of record around the world. See, for example, Athukoral v. AG, 5 May 1997, SD Nos. 1- 15/97 (Supreme Court of Sri Lanka) and Secretary of State for the Home Department v. Rehman [2001] UKHL 47 (United Kingdom House of Lords). 5 8 July 1999, Application No. 23168/94, paras. 52-54. Page 3
ARTICLE 19 therefore calls on the Spanish government to provide satisfactory justification for the extreme measures it has taken in respect of Euskaldunon Egunkaria. Should it fail to justify the closure in compliance with international standards, the case against the seven individuals indicted should be dismissed, and Euskaldunon Egunkaria be allowed to resume publication. Should the indictment be upheld, ARTICLE 19 urges the Spanish authorities to ensure a free and fair trial. Finally, the authorities should fully investigate all allegations of torture made against the police and, if confirmed, bring the responsible to justice.
For more information, please contact Luitgard Hammerer, [email protected] at +44 20 7278 9292.
http://www.article19.org/pdfs/press/spain-egunkaria-14.11.2005.pdf
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3Tá mé ar son Cead Aighnis an Nuachtáin seo.
Is stopallán i mbéal an phobail an gníomh seo.
Bad weather meant that the defence team could not attend the hearing in Madrid, as thus the case is adjourned till january 26th at 10h30.
The Basque parliament has called for the case against the egunkaria team to be shelved.
A trial against ETA support members, the largest of his type in recent history began today, it is being described as a "macro-judicial process" and certainly the extent of the prosecutions accusations merit the title.
coverage will be ongoing at the Berria.info site, a basque news platform which is pro-independence
there you may read about the issues in english-
http://www.berria.info/english/ikusi.php?id=1962
"Mother of all trials"
"As from tomorrow (21/11/05) 59 Basque citizens will be facing demands for prison terms amounting to 991 years in the biggest trial that has ever been held at the Spanish National Criminal Court
Never have so many Basque citizens come before a Spanish court. And never has the Spanish National Criminal Court put so many accused in the dock in the same trial. From tomorrow onwards and goodness knows until when 59 Basque citizens will have to answer serious charges and face requests for sentences in the Casa de Campo in Madrid, in the premises specially prepared for grand trials. The prosecutor is accusing them of being ETA members or of aiding and abetting the organisation and has requested a total of 991 years behind bars for them. The longest term requested is 51 and the shortest 10.
The trial is unprecedented as far as its size is concerned and no one knows how long it will take. Many months, if all the evidence seen in advance is to be examined and if all the witnesses called show up.
The prosecutor and the private prosecution of the AVT have called over 60 witnesses and the 11 defence lawyers over 280 and the bench has accepted nearly all of them. For expert evidence the prosecutor and the AVT have called 11 Spanish Civil Guard officers and 18 Spanish Police Officers, who took part in the pre-trial proceedings. The Defence, on the other hand, has called 24 people: historians, translators, sociologists, economists and others.
Moreover, between the three of them they will be presenting thousands of documents as documentary evidence, like political reports, police files, statements made by the accused, writs, statutes of social organisations and minutes of meetings, financial certificates, articles from the press… In theory all these documents would have to be read out, but that will be impossible. If they were, the trial would take years, not months."