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Why it's your duty to help Taysir in Spain from Al Jazeera

Yvonne Ridley | 17.09.2003 19:21 | Repression

I have never met Taysir Alouni but I have thought a lot about him over these last few days.

Why it's your duty to help Taysir


By Yvonne Ridley

Wednesday 17 September 2003, 19:16 Makka Time, 16:16 GMT


Send your emails to Garzon to complain about this grave miscarriage of justice



Related:
Spain condemned over Alouni arrest
Aljazeera stands by reporter



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I have never met Taysir Alouni but I have thought a lot about him over these last few days.



In fact we both have quite a lot in common even though we are from very different backgrounds.



Apart from working for Aljazeera we both share a great passion and dedication for the job that we do.



We have also experienced what it is like to come under fire from Britain and America being the only journalists in Kabul on the night of 7 October 2001 when the bombing of Afghanistan began.



I was locked in a Taliban prison cell in the capital while Taysir was free to cover the start of George Bush’s war on terror.



He had a near miss when a missile smashed into his Afghan office and I had a lucky escape when I was set free.



Incarcerated



Sadly, we now have something else in common. We have both been incarcerated … for doing nothing more than the job we love.



My ordeal at the hands of the Taliban lasted only 10 days and I pray that Taysir’s imprisonment in Spain will not be for much longer.



There is no greater punishment for a journalist than to be caged and isolated from the outside world because a few people do not like the news you produce.



I can’t begin to tell you how wretched and isolated he will be feeling … wondering if anyone outside the prison walls really cares about his plight. He will be confused and angry wondering how this could happen to him?



And indeed, we should all ask that question and demand an answer.



Loved or loathed



He will be wondering when the nightmare is going to end.



No convincing evidence has been produced against Taysir by the Spanish authorities other than wild accusations just because he is one of the few journalists to have interviewed Usama bin Ladin.




No journalist worth his salt would
turn down an interview with this
man


Loved or loathed, there is not one single journalist worth his or her salt, who would turn down THAT interview.



Just for the record, I have been trying since 1998 to interview UBL, and I can tell you now Taysir could not have achieved his goal without lots of hard work, effort, contact-building and sleepless nights … the hallmarks of a good journalist.



The trouble is with good journalists like Taysir, people in positions of power and authority do not like them.



They fear their integrity and do not want the truth to be brought to their breakfast table or, more importantly, anyone else’s including yours.



These people want to control the media and censor the news to stop you from finding out what is really happening in our world today.



Human rights



Good journalists make many enemies and I am sure Taysir is no exception. I’d like to bet that it is because of these enemies that he is now in the fix he is in.



The Spanish authorities are allowing themselves to be used in this mindless, endless war on terror where human rights are being carpet-bombed on an almost daily basis.



Investigative magistrate Baltasar Garzon has formally accused Taysir, a Syrian-born Spaniard, of terrorist activity, and ordered him to be held without bail. This blatant abuse of human rights could continue for up to four years.



The truth is Baltasar Garzon has been fed false information delivered by intelligence agencies from Israel and the United States – the very same two countries which produced a dodgy dossier on me to try and convince the Taliban I was also up to no good.



Dodgy dossier



Thankfully, the Taliban were clever enough to see through this clumsy attempt to blacken my reputation. I just can’t understand why the Spanish authorities are taking so long over this latest dodgy dossier.



Taysir’s arrest is illegal, unethical and outrageous. If it can happen to him, it can just as easily happen to you.



Please e-mail Judge Garzon at his personal address:  b.garzon@an.mju.es and demand Taysir’s immediate release.



Do this not just to help Taysir, but do it for our right to simply tell the truth and for your right to be heard.



*Yvonne Ridley is a senior editor at Aljazeera.net, a founding member of Women in Journalism, a member of the National Union of Journalists and International Federation of Journalist

Yvonne Ridley
- Homepage: http://english.aljazeera.net/Special+Reports/Why+its+your+duty+to+help+Taysir.htm

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

Are you serious???

25.09.2003 22:47

How absolutely LUDICROUS it is that you allege that this as*hole is being held without any evidence! The BBC article reporting his arrest includes this gem: "He has said he delivered money to Syrian exiles in Afghanistan and Turkey as a gesture of solidarity, but denied supporting terrorists."

Any seasoned journalist understands he/she CANNOT have it both ways--one cannot claim to be an "innocent bystander merely reporting the facts" while SIMULATANEOUSLY acting as courier of money and/or information for criminal organizations.

Wake the hell up!

RGB
mail e-mail: gregdmforl@yahoo.com


Racist

25.09.2003 23:28

Excuse me, but since when does "Syrian exile" *automatically* equal "criminal organization" without requiring the usual proof of criminality, unless you are a racist Islamophobe?

Z