CPJ, along with 64 other non-governmental
organizations, today wrote to Tanzanian President John Magufuli to express
concern about a worrying decline in the respect of human rights, including
freedom of expression.
In recent months, Tanzania has implemented laws that
undermine freedom of speech online, restrictions on peaceful protests, and
closed media outlets, the letter said. The organizations urged Magufuli's
government to take proactive measures to protect these rights and to recognize
publicly the essential role that a vibrant civil society and an independent
media play in creating peaceful and equal societies.
The letter can be read here. Tanzania:
Civil society groups express concern over rapid decline in human rights
Tanzania: 65 civil society groups call on the
Tanzanian Government to address rapidly deteriorating environment for media,
human rights defenders and opposition party members
To President John Magufuli
Your Excellency,
We, the undersigned civil society organisations (CSOs)
from across the world, write to express our deep concern over the worrying
decline in respect for human rights, including the rights to freedom of
association, expression and peaceful assembly, in Tanzania. We urge your
government to take proactive measures to protect these rights which are crucial
to civic space and publicly recognise the essential role that a vibrant civil
society and an independent media play in creating peaceful and equal societies.
Tanzania’s long-standing commitment to improving the
human rights of all people, both nationally and within the region, is notable
and should be acknowledged as such. However,
we are deeply alarmed that these human rights issues are being precipitously
undermined by the unwarranted closure of media outlets, judicial persecution
and harassment of independent journalists, the targeted assassination of
opposition party members, blanket restrictions on peaceful protests and the
introduction and invocation of a raft of laws to undermine freedom of speech
online. These and other forms of harassment and persecution of civil society
and media discussed below erode Tanzania’s role as a regional champion of
public freedoms, peace and stability and represent a breach of its
international, national and regional human rights obligations and commitments.
New legal restrictions criminalizing freedom of
expression on social and traditional media
The Electronic and Postal Communications (Online
Content) Regulations, which was signed into law in March 2018, criminalises a
broad scope of legitimate forms of online freedom of expression. Under the
regulation, all bloggers and persons operating online radio and television
streaming services must secure a license and pay an annual fee of over $900
before they can publish any material online. Such fees are not only financially
prohibitive but place an arbitrary bar to entry to exercise the right to freedom
of expression. We are also deeply concerned by provisions which endow the
government with the authority to revoke a permit if a site or blogger publishes
content that "causes annoyance" or "leads to public
disorder."
Of equal concern are vague and overbroad provisions of
the 2015 Cybercrimes Act which empower the government to arbitrarily ban and
sanction the dissemination of newspaper articles or social media posts which it
deems critical, including insulting the President. In particular, Article 16 criminalizes
the publication of all information deemed “false, deceptive, misleading or
inaccurate.” Persons found to have contravened the Act are subject to draconian
prison sentences and harsh fines of not less than five million shillings
($2,190) or a term of not less than three years or both. Since coming into
force, the law has been invoked to persecute dozens of individuals and
journalists. In one week alone, five private citizens were charged under the
Cybercrimes Act for statements made on Facebook, WhatsApp and other social
media platforms, including a three-year sentence handed down to a private
citizen for insulting President John Magufuli on Facebook.
Moreover, the Media Services Act, which came into
force in November 2016, allows the authorities to unilaterally determine which
journalists receive licenses, forces all journalists to obtain a license, and
makes defamation and sedition a criminal offense. Under the law, the government-run Accreditation Board is
empowered to “suspend or expunge journalists” for committing “gross
professional misconduct as prescribed in the code of ethics for professional
journalists.” The penalties for violating provisions of law are severe.
According to the law, anyone found guilty of acting with a seditious intention
who commits an offence is liable to a fine of not less than 5 million Shillings
(approximately $2,260) or three years in prison or both.
Suspensions, fines and banning media outlets
Despite strong constitutional, United Nations and
African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights safeguards protecting the right to
freedom of expression, the government has systematically targeted Tanzanian
media outlets through a combination of closures and hefty fines on newspapers.
This campaign of harassment, which appears to be an attempt to suppress their
work to report on government policy and conduct, has resulted in four prominent
newspapers being banned in 2017 and four other papers being heavily fined in
early 2018.
On 24 October 2017, the government banned the Swahili-language
Tanzania Daima for a period of 90 days on specious claims of publishing false
news about anti-retroviral drug use for people with HIV. This was the fourth
newspaper banned since June 2017 including Mwanahalisi which was banned for 24
months in September 2017; the weekly Raia Mwema for 90 days in September and
Mawio newspaper for 24 months in June 2017.
On 2 January 2018, the Tanzania Communications
Regulatory Authority (TCRA) fined five television stations a combined 60
million Tanzanian shillings ($27,000) for broadcasting “offensive and
unethical” content, in particular for airing a press statement issued on 30
November by the Legal Human Rights Centre (LHRC). The report by LHRC documented
violations such as detentions, intimidation and physical abuse in the context
of the 6 November 2017 elections of
councillors in 43 wards. The TV stations that featured the LHRC's press
statement and were subsequently penalised include: Star TV, Azam Two, East
Africa TV, Channel 10 and ITV.
Judicial harassment and persecution of journalists and
human rights defenders
In stark contrast to the authorities’ human rights
obligations to uphold and protect the safety of journalists, several
independent media practitioners have recently been subject to physical attacks
and judicial persecution. Recently on 21 November 2017, newspaper journalist
Azory Gwanda was abducted by a group of unknown assailants in the Coast Region.
Prior to his enforced disappearance, Gwanda who is a journalist with
newspapers, Mwananchi and The Citizen, had authored a number of articles
documenting the murders of several local officials and police officers. To date
Gwanda’s whereabouts remain unknown.
In August 2017, a Tanzania court began hearing a case
against Micke William and Maxence Melo Mubyazi, co-owners of the whistleblower
website, Jamii Forums. Both journalists were charged under the Cybercrimes Act
on spurious accusations of obstructing justice for failing to disclose the
identities of persons who posted details of allegedly corrupt officials on
Jamiiforums. There have been over 40 adjournments of the case, including most
recently on 3 May 2018. If convicted, they face fines up to 3 million shillings
($1,300) or a jail term of at least one year, or both.
Groups and defenders advocating for the rights of
LGBTI individuals have also been equally persecuted. Among a wave of recent
attempts to suppress organisations and activists working on SOGI issues, in
October 2017, 13 human rights lawyers and defender were arbitrarily arrested and
detained on allegations of promoting “promoting homosexuality”. Three civil
society representatives, including Ugandan and South African lawyers from the
Initiative for Strategic Litigation in Africa and nine members of Tanzanian
Community Health and Education Services and Advocacy (Chesa), were arrested
during a private meeting.
Killings and criminal cases against political
opposition members
Since the start of 2018, scores of political
opposition members and parliamentarians have been violently attacked and even
killed. On 22 February, Godfrey Luena, a member of parliament with Tanzania’s
main opposition party Chama Cha Demokrasia Na Maendeleo (CHADEMA) and a vocal
land rights defender, was killed with machetes outside of his home. Mr Luena
had been a critic of alleged state sponsored land-grabbing. Days earlier, on 13
February, Daniel John, a CHADEMA official in Dar es Salaam, was abducted and
killed by unknown assailants using machetes. Mr John was supporting an
opposition political campaign for a contested parliamentary seat in Dar es
Salaam.
A number of opposition party members and lawmakers
have also been targeted in what appears to be a systematic campaign of judicial
harassment. Among other worrying cases, two opposition leaders, CHADEMA MP Joseph
Mbilinyi and local party leader Emmanuel Masonga were sentenced to five months
on 26 February 2018 for insulting President John Magufuli during a political
rally.
Harassment, intimidation arbitrary arrest of peaceful
protesters
In response to growing public frustration over human
rights backsliding in the country, individuals and groups have increasingly
sought to exercise their rights to peaceful assembly to air their legitimate
grievances. Worryingly, the authorities, including members of the government
and security apparatus, have resorted to arbitrary arrests, excessive use of
force and intimidation to silence these protests.
In April 2018, Tanzanian activists called for national
demonstrations to bring attention to the decline in respect for human rights in
Tanzania. However, in contravention of international standards, the
authorities, which require anyone seeking to hold a public assembly to secure a
permit, declared the protests illegal.
The government and police forces responded to these
calls to stage public protests with severe intolerance, including hostile
statements by senior government and police officials, including threats that
protesters “will be beaten like stray dogs." Days before the planned 26
April demonstrations seven people were arrested in Arusha for their purported
role in organising the protests. The few who dared to take part in the protests
were quickly persecuted; nine protesters, who marched in Dar Es Salaam, were
almost immediately arrested.
Recommendations to the Government of Tanzania
The undersigned groups urge your government to create
an enabling environment for civil society and the media to operate in
accordance with the rights enshrined in the Constitution of Tanzania,
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the UN
Declaration on Human Rights Defenders and the African Charter on Human and
Peoples’ Rights, including the guidelines on freedom of association and
peaceful assembly. Tanzania has ratified both the ICCPR and the African
Charter. At a minimum, the following conditions should be ensured: freedom of
association, freedom of expression, the right to operate free from unwarranted
state interference, the right to seek and secure funding and the state’s duty
to protect. In light of this, the following specific recommendations are made.
1) All disabling and restrictive provisions in the
Cybercrimes Act, the Electronic and Postal Communications (Online Content)
Regulations and the Media Services Act must be amended and replaced by
progressive sections that will guarantee freedom of expression and the media in
line with international human rights standards.
2) The cases of newspapers banned, suspended or fined
under the Media Service Act 2016 should be reviewed to enable them to continue
their operations without undue interference.
3) Independent investigations should be conducted into
cases of attacks and assaults on journalists, human rights defenders and
opposition party members with a view to bringing suspected perpetrators to
justice and these attacks should be publicly and unequivocally condemned.
4) Government officials should desist from publicly
threatening human rights defenders including when activists that are working to
expose corrupt practices in government or are critical of government policies
and actions.
5) Best practices on the right to freedom of peaceful
assembly prescribed by the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of
peaceful assembly and of association should be adopted by the Government of
Tanzania including removing the permission regime and providing recourse in
cases of unlawful denial of the right to freedom of peaceful assembly.
Sincerely,
Access Now
African
Centre for Democracy and Human Rights Studies (ACDHRS)
Americans
for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB)
Amnesty
International
ARTICLE 19
East Africa
The Article
20 Network
Asian Legal
Resource Centre (ALRC)
Association
for Human Rights in Ethiopia (AHRE) - Ethiopia
Association
for Progressive Communications (APC)
Bahrain
Center for Human Rights - Bahrain
Balkan Civil
Society Development Network (BCSDN)
Cairo
Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS)
Caucasus
Civil Initiatives Center (CCIC)
Center for
Civil Liberties - Ukraine
Centre for
Human Rights and Rehabilitation (CHRR) - Malawi
Centre for
Research on Multinational Corporations
Chapter Four
- Uganda
Citizens for
Democratic Rights in Eritrea (CDRiE) - Eritrea
CIVICUS
Civil Rights Defenders (CRD)
Committee to
Protect Journalists (CPJ)
Commonwealth
Human Rights Initiative (CHRI)
Community
Empowerment for Progress Organization (CEPO) - South Sudan
DefendDefenders (East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project)
End Impunity
Organisation
Ethiopia
Human Rights Project (EHRP) - Ethiopia
Freedom
House
Front Line
Defenders
Greenpeace
Africa
Governance,
Elections, Advocacy, Research Services (GEARS) Initiative - Zambia
Groupe
d’Action pour le Progrès et la Paix (ONG GAPP-BÉNIN) - Bénin
HAKI Africa
- Kenya
Human Rights
Defenders Network - Sierra Leone
International Civil Society Center (ICSC)
International Rivers - Africa Program
Iraqi
Network of Social Media - Iraq
Jamaa
Resource Initiatives - East Africa
JOINT Liga
de ONGs em Mocambique - Mozambique
Karapatan
Alliance for the Advancement of People’s Rights - Philippines
Kepa - the
Finnish NGO platform - Finland
Latin
American and Caribbean Network for Democracy (REDLAD)
Liberia
Coalition of Human Rights Defenders (LICHRD) - Liberia
Ligue
Djiboutienne des Droits Humains (LDDH) - Djibouti
Ligue Iteka
- Burundi
Lumiere
Synergie pour le Developpement - Senegal
Malawi Human
Rights Defenders Coalition - Malawi
Minority
Rights Group International
National
Civic Forum - Sudan
Observatoire
des Droits de l'Homme au Rwanda - Rwanda
Odhikar -
Bangladesh
OutRight
Action International
Pan-African
Human Rights Defenders Network (PAHRDN)
Public
Interest Law Center (PILC) - Chad
RESOCIDE -
Burkina Faso
Robert F.
Kennedy Human Rights
Robert L.
Bernstein Institute for Human Rights | NYU School of Law
Servicios y
AsesorÃa para la Paz (Serapaz) - México
Sinergia -
Venezuela
Solidarity
Center
Sudanese
Development Initiative (SUDIA) - Sudan
Tournons la
page (TLP)
West African
Human Rights Defenders’ Network (WAHRDN)
World
Movement for Democracy
The Zambia
Council for Social Development (ZCSD) - Zambia
Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum - Zimbabwe
CPJ joins call for Tanzanian government to respect human rights
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Saturday, May 12, 2018
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