Talk is not a crime
Egypt′s government is perhaps the biggest abuser of defamation and blasphemy laws to suppress differing views. In particular, the Egyptian authorities brazenly use Article 98(f) of the Egyptian Penal Code – which prohibits citizens from defaming a ″heavenly religion″, inciting sectarian strife, or insulting Islam – to detain, prosecute and imprison members of non-majority religious groups, especially Christians. All that is needed is a vague claim that their activities are jeopardising ″communal harmony″.
Moreover, the writer Ahmed Naji was recently handed a two-year prison sentence for violating ″public modesty″, by publishing a sexually explicit excerpt from his novel. This came just a month after the author Fatma Naoot appealed the three-year sentence she received when a Facebook post criticising the slaughter of animals for a Muslim feast led to a guilty verdict for ″contempt for Islam″. The list goes on.
Ominously, according to a 2015 report by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, blasphemy cases have been on the rise since 2011. In January 2015, President Abdul Fatah al-Sisi issued a decree that permits the government to ban any foreign publications it deems offensive to religion, thereby expanding the government′s already significant censorship powers and increasing pressure on journalists further.
Journalists are fair game
The situation is not much better in Tunisia, where, according to Freedom House′s 2015 report, ″criminal defamation remains one of the biggest obstacles to independent reporting.″ Moreover, many are concerned that the country′s newly established cyber-crime investigative agency will carry out ″unchecked government surveillance on Tunisian citizens″, as occurred under former President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who was ousted in the Arab Spring revolution.
Jordan has also ratcheted up its attempts to limit free expression, with a June 2015 amendment to its cyber-crime law allowing the attorney-general to detain, without a court order, anyone deemed to have used the Internet for defamation. While Jordan′s Press and Publications Law prohibits the arrest of journalists for opinions expressed in print, journalists are now fair game if those opinions appear online. And, indeed, charges have already been brought against several.
Among the highest-profile defamation-related cases in the Middle East today is that involving Najat Abu Bakr, a member of Palestine′s parliament who has been summoned for interrogation by the attorney-general after levelling corruption accusations against Hussein al-Araj, a cabinet minister with close ties to President Mahmoud Abbas. The move seems also to be motivated by Bakr′s support for a teacher′s strike in the West Bank – an embarrassment to the Abbas government.
Though Palestine′s attorney-general is allowed, under existing defamation legislation, to hold a person for 48 hours of questioning, human-rights groups have condemned the move. Bakr, for her part, refused the order and staged a sit-in at the parliament building. Palestinian security forces surrounded the building, but did not attempt to arrest her.
The intensification – and increasingly broad application – of defamation laws in the Middle East and North Africa represents a dangerous trend, one that is fuelling an increasingly powerful backlash from civil-society groups. Naji′s case, for example, spurred Egyptian writers, artists and filmmakers to launch a public campaign for greater freedom of creativity and expression.
Dangerous trend in defamation legislation
Furthermore, the former Google executive Wael Ghonim, who was active in the country′s 2011 uprising, publicly criticised the verdict against Naji. And several state-owned artistic publications were issued with their front pages either depicting Naji, or including just a few words expressing support for free speech, with the rest of the page left blank.
In Jordan, a coalition led by the Center for Defending Freedom of Journalists has launched a new campaign, ″Talk is Not a Crime″, to raise awareness about declining media freedom. And in Palestine, protests against the use of defamation laws to imprison political opponents have gained traction, with popular support for Bakr having played a key role in spurring the agreement that allowed her to return to her house in Nablus without being arrested or called in for questioning.
Outcries against individual cases can go only so far. Campaigns must – and, increasingly, do – focus on genuine changes to defamation laws, to ensure that governments cannot use them to stifle dissent. The key will be to remove the criminal element from defamation cases and thus the prospect of imprisonment and instead prosecute them as civil cases, with those found guilty of defamation being subject to reasonable fines.
Compelling lawmakers to decriminalise defamation will not be easy. But with a concerted effort from all relevant parties – especially the media, civil society and human-rights activists – plus the support of regional and international actors, it is possible. Given the critical importance of free speech to economic and social progress, there is no time to waste.
Daoud Kuttab
© Project Syndicate 2016
Daoud Kuttab is former professor at Princeton University and founder of the Institute of Modern Media at Al-Quds University in Ramallah