SPAIN: A SPANISH JUDGE HAS ORDERED A JOURNALIST FROM AL JAZEERA TV NETWORK TO REMAIN IN JAIL ON CHARGES OF BELONGING TO AL QAEDA CELL IN SPAIN
Record ID:
646525
SPAIN: A SPANISH JUDGE HAS ORDERED A JOURNALIST FROM AL JAZEERA TV NETWORK TO REMAIN IN JAIL ON CHARGES OF BELONGING TO AL QAEDA CELL IN SPAIN
- Title: SPAIN: A SPANISH JUDGE HAS ORDERED A JOURNALIST FROM AL JAZEERA TV NETWORK TO REMAIN IN JAIL ON CHARGES OF BELONGING TO AL QAEDA CELL IN SPAIN
- Date: 11th September 2003
- Summary: (W5) (MADRID, SPAIN, SEPTEMBER 11, 2003) (REUTERS) SLV/CU EXTERIOR OF SPANISH HIGH COURT BUILDING; POLICE VAN DRIVING PAST HIGH COURT; SIGN AT ENTRANCE OF COURT (3 SHOTS) SV SPANISH JUDGE BATASSAR GARZON LEAVING COURT MCU/SLV AL-JAZEERA BRUSSELS BUREAU CHIEF AHMED KAMEL TALKING ON MOBILE; GARZON LEAVING IN CAR (3 SHOTS) MCU (French) AHMED KAMEL, AL-JAZEERA BRUSSELS BUREAU CHIEF SAYING "We are very shocked, I am personally very shocked. And I consider this accusation to be like the first Inquisition. It's a return to the Inquisition. I am one hundred per cent sure that Taysser Alouni is not a member of Al Qaeda. I have warned him several times over the last year that he must not go to Spain, because it's like the Inquisition. There are no rights like before. He was sure that it is a state where his rights would be respected, he's sure he's innocent and will be free. He was one hundred per cent sure. But unfortunately I think he is going to pay the price because he has not understood that something has changed since September the 11th, the rights that existed in Spain before don't exist any longer." MCU CAMERAMAN MCU (FRENCH) KAMEL SAYING "If he was given information outside of his work, not as a journalist, the judiciary have the right to access the information, but any information he was given in his capacity as a journalist the judiciary does not have a right to." SLV JOURNALISTS OUTSIDE COURT AND READING THE SENTENCE MCU (ARABIC) KAMEL SAYING "We feel regret regarding the sentence. The sentence is not just. There are forces inside and outside of Spain that are attempting to get hold of the information that he received as a journalist, information that the authorities would not have been able to get hold of themselves. The information that he got hold of was information that could not be accessed under normal circumstances and he is under arrest for supplying us with this information. We said to him "you have done an interview with Osama bin Laden, that is not against the law." We are not going to ask him how he met bin Laden, and the details of the interview because that is part of his integrity as a journalist. By law you cannot force a journalist to reveal his sources and by Spain doing this they are breaking the law. Spain is taking an unorthodox position and by holding him under the terrorism act they are violating human rights." SV LAWYER FOR TAYSSER ALOUNI, MANUEL DEL PRADO SPEAKING TO JOURNALISTS SV AL-JAZEERA CREW INTERVIEWING DEL PRADO MCU (Spanish) MANUEL DEL PRADO, LAWYER FOR TAYSSER ALOUNI SPEAKING SV/SLV EXTERIOR OF COURT (2 SHOTS)
- Embargoed: 26th September 2003 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: MADRID AND SOTO DEL REAL, SPAIN
- Country: Spain
- Topics: Crime,Communications,Politics
- Reuters ID: LVAE014P45XGXUWP72NZIUXV3J28
- Story Text: A Spanish judge has ordered that an Al Jazeera
journalist accused of belonging to an al Qaeda cell in
Spain remain in jail without bail and stand trial.
A Spanish judge on Thursday (September 11, 2003) ordered
a journalist from the Arab television network Al Jazeera to
remain in jail without bail and stand trial on charges of
belonging to an al Qaeda cell in Spain.
Tayseer Alouni, best known for interviewing Osama bin
Laden shortly after the attacks in the United States on
September 11, 2001, is accused of providing money and
information to al Qaeda operatives and recruiting fighters
for the group.
The Syrian, who holds Spanish citizenship, was arrested
at his home in southern Spain last week. He denies the
charges. Alouni says he took money to Syrian exiles in
Afghanistan and Turkey as a gesture of solidarity and
denies the financial aid was for al Qaeda members.
Alouni's arrest has drawn criticism from Arab human
rights groups, journalists' organisations and his
colleagues at Qatar-based Al Jazeera, who called the arrest
an attack on press freedom.
"If he was given information outside of his work, not
as a journalist, the judiciary have the right to access the
information, but any information he was given in his
capacity as a journalist the judiciary does not have a
right to," he said.
"By law you cannot force a journalist to reveal his
sources, and by Spain doing this they are breaking the law.
Spain is taking an unorthodox position and by holding him
under the terrorism act they are violating human rights,"he
added.
The order by Spanish Judge Baltasar Garzon accuses
Alouni of belonging to an al Qaeda cell in Spain run by
Imad Eddim Barakat Yarkas, also known as Abu Dahdah, who is
being held by Spanish authorities on suspicion of playing a
role in the September 11 attacks.
Alouni testified on Monday (September 8) and accepted
he had invited people to his house who were later arrested
on suspicion of belonging to al Qaeda or playing a role in
the September 11 attacks. Prosecutors say Abu Dahdah was
among them.
Alouni's lawyer, Manuel Del Prado, said he would appeal
to have the journalist released on bail before his trial,
which might last up to four years. He said he did not know
when the trial would start.
Del Prado added that Alouni did not know any members of
al Qaeda on a personal level although he had come into
contact with members of the group while working as a
journalist in Afghanistan.
Spain, one of the staunchest supporters of the U.S.-led
war in Iraq and its global campaign against terror, has
made dozens of high-profile arrests of suspected militants
since the September 11 attacks. Many of those accused of
links with groups such as al Qaeda have since been
released. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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