Badinan journalist to spend six more months in prison: Lawyer

23 hours ago
Rudaw
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ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Sherwan Sherwani, one of the journalists arrested during the 2020 anti-government protests in Duhok, will spend six additional months behind bars after a judge refused to sign his conditional release, one of his lawyers said Sunday. 

“We have been trying to release Sherwan Sherwani since last Sunday, but today the judge refused to release him on conditional release,” lawyer Ramazan Artisi told Rudaw. “He must remain in prison for another six months.” 

Sherwani was arrested alongside a group of other journalists and activists in October 2020 for his involvement in protests over unpaid wages by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). They were called the Badinan detainees because they came from Badini areas in Duhok province. He and four others were sentenced to six years behind bars in February 2021 on charges of “endangering national security.” 

His sentence was reduced by 50 percent in February 2022 by a decree from Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani but he was given four more years in prison by an Erbil court in July 2023 on charges of faking a legal document. The new term was handed just two months before his scheduled release. Another decree from Barzani reduced the sentence to two years.

The trials and prison sentences of the Badinan prisoners drew outcry from diplomats, media watchdogs, and human rights groups who highlighted flaws in the legal system and accused Kurdish authorities of cracking down on dissent - charges the KRG has denied.

Amnesty International has slammed the KRG for Sherwani’s imprisonment, saying he was detained on “bogus charges of espionage and sharing information with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).”

“The trial was marred by serious violations of the right to a fair trial, including allegations of torture and other ill-treatment that were not investigated, the reliance on torture-tainted confessions, and a refusal to allow defence lawyers timely access to the case files,” Amnesty lamented. 

Kurdish authorities have repeatedly faced harsh criticism for their treatment of journalists as well as for imposing restrictive measures on the press.

A total of 182 violations were committed against journalists and media outlets in 2024, according to figures from Metro Center for Journalists Right and Advocacy, a decline compared to the 231 violations recorded the year before.

Soran Hussein contributed to this report.
 

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