Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07ALGIERS1115
2007-08-07 12:53:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Algiers
Cable title:  

LONGSTANDING ACTIVIST'S VIEW ON THE HUMAN RIGHTS

Tags:  PHUM SOCI PGOV AG 
pdf how-to read a cable
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DE RUEHAS #1115/01 2191253
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 071253Z AUG 07
FM AMEMBASSY ALGIERS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 4198
INFO RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON 1701
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 2300
RUEHRB/AMEMBASSY RABAT 1891
RUEHTU/AMEMBASSY TUNIS 6729
RUEHTRO/AMEMBASSY TRIPOLI
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ALGIERS 001115 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/07/2017
TAGS: PHUM SOCI PGOV AG
SUBJECT: LONGSTANDING ACTIVIST'S VIEW ON THE HUMAN RIGHTS
SITUATION IN ALGERIA

Classified By: Charge d'Affaires, a.i. Thomas F. Daughton;
reasons 1.4 (b, d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ALGIERS 001115

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/07/2017
TAGS: PHUM SOCI PGOV AG
SUBJECT: LONGSTANDING ACTIVIST'S VIEW ON THE HUMAN RIGHTS
SITUATION IN ALGERIA

Classified By: Charge d'Affaires, a.i. Thomas F. Daughton;
reasons 1.4 (b, d)


1. (C) SUMMARY: A societal respect for human rights is
lacking in Algeria, according to prominent human rights
activist and lawyer Ali Yahia Abdenour. Looking back over
decades of his work, he commented that while some progress
has been made in comparison to the low point of the 1990s,
significant change will only come when a new generation of
political leadership emerges. He highlighted press freedom
and the right of association as the most urgent issues now.
END SUMMARY.

CHALLENGES TO HUMAN RIGHTS IN ALGERIA
--------------


2. (C) Prominent Algerian human rights defender Ali Yahia
Abdenour, president emeritus of the Algerian League for the
Defense of Human Rights (LADDH),told the Ambassador August 4
that Algeria did not have a society-wide culture of respect
of human rights. The country, he said, was divided into
"tribes," with individuals more interested in their group or
people from their region. Abdenour articulated two key
impediments to the promotion of human rights in Algeria.
First, the State of Emergency in force since 1992 was used to
prevent individuals from meeting freely and from
demonstrating publicly and, as a result, was preventing
Algeria's natural evolution towards a greater respect for
human rights. Second, Algeria's political leadership was
aged, had come from or been selected by the military and, as
a result, restrictive. He also derided the country's
presidents for their lack of formal education.


3. (C) Abdenour supported a dualistic approach to defending
human rights in Algeria: one public, including clear
campaigns to defend the principles of human rights; the other
working directly with various power groups within the GOA to
effect change on specific cases. Abdenour said it was
possible to secure improvements on individual cases -- better
treatment of prisoners or their release, for example -- but
he insisted that public pressure for better GOA policy
overall was also vital.

ONGOING HUMAN RIGHTS ISSUES IN ALGERIA
--------------


4. (C) Abdenour acknowledged the relative freedom of Algerian
newspapers to criticize President Bouteflika, to report on
sensitive issues and to publish biting political cartoons.
He cautioned, however, that each newspaper had its own
political leanings, with some linked to special interest
groups to include the army and the security services.
Criticism of the president in some newspapers, he claimed,
had the support of the military in its competition with
Bouteflika and other GOA officials. The president or other
officials use the defamation laws to intimidate the press, he
added. The Ambassador pointed to the DVC the Embassy
organized in May about decriminalizing defamation. The
Ambassador also pointed to his public remarks in the
Arabic-language daily El-Khabar in June criticizing the
existing defamation laws and urging that defamation be
treated as a civil, not criminal, offense. Abdenour praised
the public statements and recommended the we continue our
efforts on defamation.


5. (C) Abdenour also told the Ambassador that torture in
Algeria by the security services had diminished significantly
in comparison to the past. He asserted that President
Bouteflika and military intelligence chief Lt. General
Mediene had both issued instructions forbidding torture in
interrogations. There were still abuses, he noted, but they
were problems with individual officers rather than systemic
problems.


6. (C) The Ambassador asked Abdenour where U.S. pressure
could be most useful. Abdenour said beyond the press
defamation issue, the most important problem to address was
freedom of association. The GOA, he stated, blocks meetings
and seminars that opposition parties and independent NGOs try
to organize. It uses authorities under the State of
Emergency to refuse permission for such events. He
recommended the U.S. press for the termination of the State
of Emergency so that Algerian civil society could be more
active and independent.

TROUBLE WITHIN THE LEAGUE
--------------


ALGIERS 00001115 002 OF 002



7. (C) Abdenour alluded to the widely discussed tension
within the LADDH, describing the current leader, Hocine
Zehouane, as isolated and intellectually stuck. (Note: Much
of the tension stems from divergent views on the future
direction of the organization. We met Zehouane July 31, but
he made no mention of ongoing organizational turmoil. End
note.)


8. (C) COMMENT: Ali Abdenour has been a thorn in the side of
the government for 15 years. Under his very prominent
leadership in the 1990s, the LADDH was the most outspoken
organization criticizing the then-military government's
detentions, summary executions and torture, its pressure on
the press, as well as its Legislative Decree 92-03 on
subversion and terrorism. Abdenour, who is now over 80, is
pushing the current LADDH leadership to be more aggressive.
For its part, the GOA has shifted away from attacking him to
ignoring him. Evidence of this, according to Abdenour, is
the absence of press coverage on his recently published book.
Abdenour believes the media are operating on instructions.
DAUGHTON