Tunisia: Release Sonia Dahmani and end weaponisation of cybercrime law

Tunisia: Release Sonia Dahmani and end weaponisation of cybercrime law - Media

Demonstrators hold a banner with the message ''Release Sonia Dahmani', Tunis, April 2025. Credit: Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto/ Reuters

ARTICLE 19 and 17 partner media and human rights organisations call on the Tunisian authorities to immediately and unconditionally release Ms Sonia Dahmani, a lawyer and political commentator, who is being unjustly prosecuted under Tunisia’s repressive Decree-Law 54 for exercising her right to freedom of expression and currently serving nearly five years in prison solely for doing her job. We further call on the government to drop all pending charges against her and end the misuse of cybercrime Decree-Law 54, which has become the primary tool used by President Kais Saied’s government to criminalise political commentary and independent journalism, rather than combating actual cybercrime.

Sonia Dahmani was arrested in May 2024 and currently faces five separate cases, all in retaliation for her public commentary on government policies related to migration, governance, and civil liberties. She has already been convicted in three cases, most recently on 30 June, receiving nearly five years in prison, including two separate convictions for identical remarks made on different platforms. In a fourth case, she could face up to a 10-year prison sentence for similar comments, with her next hearing scheduled for 11 July. A fifth case remains open and under investigation.

Dahmani’s lawyer, Sami Ben Ghazi, told the Committee to Protect Journalists that all five prosecutions against his client represent a pattern of judicial harassment aimed at silencing her personally. In prison, Dahmani has endured harsh and degrading prison conditions, including sexual assault, restricted access to her family and legal team, and denial of adequate medical care. She suffers from diabetes and high blood pressure, making her detention conditions particularly dangerous to her health and well-being, according to Ms. Ramla Dahmani, Sonia Dahmani’s sister, who is based abroad, and who was also sentenced in absentia on 1 July to 2 years in prison in retaliation for her sister’s work.

Decree 54, introduced in 2022 — a year after President Kais Saied’s power grab — has become the primary tool for suppressing critical voices in Tunisia. It stands in direct conflict with Decree 115, the country’s pre-existing press law, which prohibits prison sentences for media offences and guarantees press freedom. The Tunisian government must uphold Decree 115 and its constitutional obligations and immediately stop the use of repressive laws to silence journalists, bloggers, and political media commentators.

We urge the Tunisian authorities to:

  1. Immediately release Sonia Dahmani and drop all charges in the pending cases against her and her sister, Ramla Dahmani;
  2. End the abusive application of Decree 54 and ensure all laws governing media and expression comply with international standards;
  3. Restore enforcement of Decree 115 and constitutional protections for press freedom and free expression.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalist’s latest annual prison census, at least five journalists were behind bars in Tunisia on 1 December, 2024, the highest number since 1992.

 

Signatories:

1. ACAT-France

2. ARIJ – Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism

3. ARTICLE 19

4. Cartoonists Rights

5. Cedar Centre for Legal Studies (CCLS)

6. Committee for Justice (CFJ)

7. Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)

8. Egyptian Human Rights Forum (EHRF)

9. Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR)

10. Egyptian Observatory for Journalism and Media

11. EuroMed Rights

12. Filastiniyat – Palestine

13. HuMENA for Human Rights and Civic Engagement

14. Index on Censorship

15. Lebanese Center for Human Rights

16. MENA Rights Group

17. People in Need

18. The Middle East Democracy Center