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Syria jails human rights activist | Syria jails human rights activist |
(about 4 hours later) | |
A Syrian human rights activist has been jailed for five years for spreading hostile information and joining an illegal political group, lawyers say. | |
Anwar al-Bunni, a prominent advocate for democratic reform in Syria, has been in detention since May 2006. | Anwar al-Bunni, a prominent advocate for democratic reform in Syria, has been in detention since May 2006. |
Correspondents say the heavy sentence sends a strong warning to the opposition and shows Syria has turned its back on Western pressure to reform. | Correspondents say the heavy sentence sends a strong warning to the opposition and shows Syria has turned its back on Western pressure to reform. |
Bunni was also ordered to pay a fine of about £1,000 ($2,000). | Bunni was also ordered to pay a fine of about £1,000 ($2,000). |
The court convicted him of spreading false or exaggerated news that could weaken national morale, affiliating with an unlicensed political association with an international nature, discrediting state institutions and contacting a foreign country, his lawyer Khalil Matouk said. | |
Bunni told the court he was proud of what he was doing. | |
"I didn't commit any crime. This sentence is to shut me up and to stop the effort to expose human rights violations in Syria," he said, according to Reuters. | |
There has been no confirmation of the sentence from the Syrian authorities, who usually do not comment on trials related to political or national security issues. | |
'Flagrant violation' | 'Flagrant violation' |
Bunni was arrested after signing an appeal for radical reform in relations between Syria and Lebanon in May 2006. | Bunni was arrested after signing an appeal for radical reform in relations between Syria and Lebanon in May 2006. |
The Beirut-Damascus Declaration, calling on Syria to recognise Lebanon as a fully independent country, was signed by nearly 300 Syrian and Lebanese intellectuals. | The Beirut-Damascus Declaration, calling on Syria to recognise Lebanon as a fully independent country, was signed by nearly 300 Syrian and Lebanese intellectuals. |
Two prominent fellow signatories, Michel Kilo and Mahmoud Issa, have also been charged over the same petition. | Two prominent fellow signatories, Michel Kilo and Mahmoud Issa, have also been charged over the same petition. |
Mr Matouk, said he would appeal against Bunni's conviction within 30 days. | |
He called the trial politically motivated and "a flagrant violation of freedom of opinion and expression and an attempt to intimidate Syrian society". | He called the trial politically motivated and "a flagrant violation of freedom of opinion and expression and an attempt to intimidate Syrian society". |
Crackdown | |
Bunni, 48, sometimes defended members of his family in court, many of whom are political dissidents. His two brothers have already spent 30 years in jail between them. | |
He had used EU funding to start a human rights training centre in Syria. | |
In the past two years the authorities have stepped up their crackdown on dissidents, and international human rights organisations say the situation is deteriorating, says the BBC's Kim Ghattas in Beirut. | |
The conviction was announced as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon was in Damascus for tough talks with President Bashar al-Assad on two Lebanese issues. | The conviction was announced as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon was in Damascus for tough talks with President Bashar al-Assad on two Lebanese issues. |
Mr Ban wants Syria to support an international court to try the suspected killers of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, and to prevent arms smuggling to the Hezbollah militant group. |