OPINION No. 23/1999 (DJIBOUTI)
Communication addressed to the Government on 19 February 1999
Concerning Aref Mohamed Aref
The State is not a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights 1. The Working Group on Arbitrary Detention was established by resolution
1991/42 of the Commission on Human Rights. Its mandate was clarified and extended
by resolution 1997/50. Pursuant to its methods of work, the Working Group forwarded
to the Government the above-mentioned communication.
2. The Working Group conveys its appreciation to the Government for having forwarded
the requisite information in good time.
3. The Working Group regards deprivation of liberty as arbitrary in the following
cases:
(i) When it manifestly cannot be justified on any legal basis (such as continued
detention after the sentence has been served or despite an applicable amnesty
act)
(category I);
(ii) When the deprivation of liberty is the result of a judgement or sentence
for the exercise of the rights and freedoms proclaimed in articles 7, 13, 14,
18, 19, 20 and 21 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and also, in
respect of States parties, by articles 12, 18, 19, 21, 22, 25, 26 and 27 of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (category II);
(iii) When the complete or partial non-observance of the relevant international
standards set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in the
relevant international instruments accepted by the States concerned relating
to the right to a fair trial is of such gravity as to confer on the deprivation
of liberty, of
whatever kind, an arbitrary character (category III).
4. In the light of the allegations made, the Working Group welcomes with satisfaction
the Government’s cooperation. The Group transmitted the reply provided
by the Government to the source and received its comments.
5. According to the allegation, Aref Mohamed Aref is a lawyer and human rights
activist in his country. As such, he took part in the Rome Diplomatic Conference
as a member of the coalition of non-governmental organizations which supported
the establishment of an international criminal court. He was arrested on 15
February 1999 without a warrant and taken to an unknown place. The source claims
not to know the grounds for the arrest, but states that Aref received a two-year
sentence, with six months’ rigorous imprisonment, and that the trial took
place in unlawful conditions with no possibility of a genuine defence. According
to the
allegation, his conditions of detention are precarious, since he was taken to
a jail far from his home and his family.
6. The Government’s reply contains elements of two kinds. First, it maintains
that Aref’s detention is the result of a criminal charge of defrauding
a client, who requested him to collect money owed in Djibouti for wheat imported
from the United States. The ship was shelled as it passed the port of Aden -
where a civil war was going on - on the way to Djibouti. Mr. Aref was defending
the interests of the insurers, the charterers, the shippers and the creditors,
who all agreed to a court-ordered sale of the cargo. Later, however, they ordered
the lawyer to suspend the sale because of the low price it would have fetched,
but he went ahead with it anyway and bought the cargo for himself at a price
of US$ 1 million, even though it was worth four times more.
7. The Government’s second argument is that Mr. Aref is not a human rights
lawyer, but an unscrupulous politician who sets up groups which are supposedly
working for human rights, but in fact are only serving his own interests. It
denies that he had no defence and is being held incommunicado, noting that he
has even given interviews to the international press.
8. Aref was released on 5 May 1999, thanks to an amnesty decreed by the new
President-elect of Djibouti.
9. Since the above-mentioned person has been released under the amnesty referred
to and the information provided by the source and the Government has not been
confirmed, the Working Group considers, pursuant to its methods of work, that
the case should be filed.
10. In the light of the foregoing, the Working Group decides to file the case without expressing an opinion on the arbitrary nature of the detention.
Adopted on 16 September 1999