Yahoo – AFP,
20 Jan 2015
![]() |
Tunisian
protestors shout slogans in front of the military tribunal in Tunis on
January
20, 2015, during a trial of bloger and journalist Yassine Ayari (AFP
Photo/Fethi
Belaid)
|
Tunis (AFP)
- A Tunisian military court sentenced blogger Yassine Ayari to a year in prison
Tuesday for defaming the military, in a case that has been criticised by human
rights groups.
The
33-year-old was arrested on December 25 on his return from Paris, following an
initial three-year sentence handed down the previous month in his absence.
Ayari told
the court before the new ruling that the charges were a "settling of
scores against me for criticising officers in the army."
![]() |
Tunisian
protestors shout slogans in front of
the military tribunal in Tunis on January
20,
2015, during a trial of bloger and journalist
Yassine Ayari (AFP Photo/Fethi Belaid)
|
Dozens of
protesters gathered outside the court demanding Ayari's immediate release,
saying the conviction was a violation of freedom of expression.
The
demonstrators chanted "Down with military trials" and "No return
to dictatorship".
The defence
team said it planned to appeal.
"Freedom
of expression is the only benefit of the revolution and today we see a blogger
sentenced harshly by a military court for criticising the army," said
lawyer Malek Ben Amor.
Ayari was
also an activist during the regime of dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who was
ousted in a 2011 uprising that triggered the Arab Spring revolts.
In recent
months, he had published blogs critical of the Nidaa Tounes party, which won
Tunisia's first-post revolution parliamentary elections in October.
New York-based
Human Rights Watch has described the case against him as "not worthy of
the new Tunisia".
It has
urged parliament to reform laws that lead to imprisonment for defaming or
insulting state institutions, and to remove jurisdiction of military courts
over civilians.


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