An Iraqi court has sentenced a young activist accused of insulting the powerful pro-Iran paramilitaries of Hachd al-Chaabi to three years in prison, the NGO Human Rights Watch deploring the instrumentalization of justice to repress any "
peaceful
" dissent.
AFP consulted on Wednesday December 7 a copy of the verdict handed down Monday December 5 by a Baghdad court against Haidar al-Zaidi.
The 20-year-old activist, detained, can still appeal his conviction.
He was on trial for a tweet, which was deleted from his account, in which he attacked Abu Mehdi al-Mouhandis, former number two of Hachd al-Chaabi, killed in January 2020 with Iranian general Qassem Souleimani by an American armed drone on the road to Baghdad airport.
Screenshots of this tweet were shared by accounts close to Hashd.
“Insult to state institutions”
Haidar al-Zaidi wrote on Facebook on Sunday that he was appearing for "
insulting state institutions
", calling for a solidarity rally outside the court.
He recalled being briefly arrested in June before being released on bail.
Read alsoIran threatens Iraq with an anti-Kurdish operation
Denying being the source of the incriminated tweet, the young man and his father ensure that his Twitter account was hacked, HRW said on Tuesday evening in a press release.
“
No matter who posted the message, the Iraqi justice system should not be used as a tool of repression against peaceful criticism of the authorities or armed actors,
” deplores HRW.
Made up of former paramilitaries integrated into the regular forces, the Hachd al-Chaabi can file a judicial request to claim financial compensation, according to the verdict.
On social networks, users have compared this sentence to the recent release on bail granted to a businessman involved in the embezzlement of 2.5 billion dollars stolen from the tax authorities.
Read alsoIraq avoids in extremis sinking into violence
In June, the UN mission in Iraq had deplored an “
environment of fear and intimidation
”, listing several incidents “
aimed at suppressing all dissent
” and “
perpetrated by unidentified armed elements
”.
Parliament is currently studying a bill on "
freedom of expression, assembly and peaceful demonstration
", submitted by the Human Rights Commission to guarantee such freedoms "
without undermining public order and morals
,” according to a statement.
In the fall of 2019, Iraq experienced an unprecedented protest movement denouncing endemic corruption, economic difficulties and the decline of public services.
The repression with live ammunition left more than 600 dead.