OPINION No. 27/2001 (MOROCCO)
Communication addressed to the Government on 13 June 2001
Concerning: Former Captain Mustapha Adib
The State is 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. The mandate of the Working Group was clarified
and extended by resolution 1997/50 and reconfirmed by resolution 2000/36. Acting
in accordance with 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. The reply has been transmitted to the
source.
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 the cooperation
of the Government. The Working Group transmitted the reply provided by the Government
to the source and received its comments. The Working Group believes that it
is in a position to render an opinion on the facts and circumstances of the
case in question.
5. According to the source, Mustapha Adib, born on 16 September 1968, of Moroccan
nationality, was arrested by military personnel on 5 December 1999 at the military
airbase of Sidi Slimane, 80 km north of Rabat, where he was posted at the time.
6. Mustapha Adib was responsible for equipment at the airbase of Errachidia,
in the south of Morocco. He had occasion to witness illegal trafficking in fuel,
organized by the most senior officer of the base. The unit received a fuel consignment
for the operation of a large radar system. The traffic consisted in diverting
and selling the fuel oil received free to a neighbouring gas station. Some 120
tonnes of fuel oil are believed to have been involved over a period
of 10 months.
7. As the person responsible for supplies, Captain Adib was required by his
superiors to sign fuel vouchers. As he refused to become involved in corrupt
dealings, he suffered various forms of pressure and then penalties, for refusing
to obey.
8. In October 1998, he reported the illegal trafficking to Crown Prince Sidi
Mohamed, as coordinator of the Royal Armed Forces. After an inquiry, the senior
officers mentioned in the report were found guilty of diverting fuel supplies,
complicity and failure to report offences by the Permanent Tribunal of the Royal
Armed Forces. Captain Adib, on the other hand, was exonerated of any involvement
in the trafficking he had reported. Looked upon thenceforth, however, as a “black
sheep” in the army, he was subjected to harassment, bullying, close confinement
and various other forms of punishment. He received four disciplinary sanctions.
At
the end of 1998, he was transferred to the base of Salé, then in February
1999 to the base of Sidi Slimane.
9. Mustapha Adib decided finally to appeal against the disciplinary sanctions.
According to the source, those appeals merely made matters worse. A request
for discharge from the army was refused. Feeling that he had exhausted all possible
remedies, he contacted Mr. Jean-Pierre Tuquoi, a journalist with the French
daily Le Monde specializing in Maghreb affairs. The interview took place on
30 November 1999. On 5 December, before anything was published, Mustapha Adib
was arrested. He was sentenced to 60 days’ confinement in a military prison
starting from 10 December 1999.
10. On 16 December 1999, Le Monde published an article under the title “Moroccan
officers denounce corruption in the army”, signed by Jean-Pierre Tuquoi.
Captain Adib was cited as one of the sources of the information. The Gendarmerie
opened an investigation and Captain Adib was placed in pre-trial detention on
17 January 2000.
11. The source adds that, in a judgement on 17 February 2000, the Permanent
Tribunal of the Royal Armed Forces found Captain Adib guilty of a violation
of military rules and contempt of the army, on the basis of articles 159 and
178 of the Code of Military Justice. He received the maximum applicable sentence,
namely five years’ imprisonment, and was discharged from the army. On
21 February 2000, Captain Adib initiated the only appeal action possible, for
judicial review of his case by the Supreme Court. On 24 June 2000, the Supreme
Court annulled the judgement for lack of reasons regarding the absence of attenuating
circumstances and referred the case back to the Permanent Tribunal of the Royal
Armed Forces, with a different composition. On 6 October 2000, Mustapha Adib
was sentenced by the Permanent Tribunal to two and a half years’ imprisonment
and to dismissal from the army. By decision of 22 February 2001, the Supreme
Court rejected the appeal brought by Captain Adib against that judgement, thus
making it irrevocable.
12. Still according to the source, Captain Mustapha Adib was not given a fair
trial before the Permanent Tribunal of the Royal Armed Forces. His presumed
innocence was violated and the Permanent Tribunal displayed a lack of impartiality
with regard to the hearing of witnesses. By ordering him to appear in civilian
dress, the Tribunal had ignored the ruling of the Supreme Court, which had annulled
Captain Adib’s dismissal. The source also alleges that the Tribunal acceded
to all the prosecution’s requests and systematically rejected all those
put forward by the defence. No preliminary hearing was held for the accused
to explain his case. At the time of the second hearing before the Supreme Court,
Captain Adib’s counsel had not been informed of the case brought by the
prosecution.
13. The source considers that the arrest, pre-trial detention and conviction
of Mustapha Adib are due exclusively to the fact that he made use of his right
to freedom of expression. The restriction imposed on Captain Adib was not referred
to expressly in the law. Moroccan law makes no provision for restricting the
right to denounce corrupt behaviour. On the contrary, it was Captain Adib’s
duty to report corrupt deeds that were prejudicial to the army’s reputation.
The effect of such restrictions was to stifle any attempts to report facts which
are punishable under Moroccan law and to cover up corruption, rather than to
punish contempt of the army or the violation of military rules.
14. In its reply, the Government merely recalled the facts which had led to
Mustapha Adib’s conviction for violating military rules and contempt of
the army by the Permanent Tribunal of the Royal Armed Forces, and the various
trials which had led to his last sentence of two and a half years’ imprisonment.
15. In his rejoinder, the source maintains that Mustapha Adib did not enjoy
a fair trial before the Permanent Tribunal of the Royal Armed Forces and that
his pre-trial detention and conviction were due solely to the fact that he had
used his right to freedom of expression.
16. With regard to the violation of the right to a fair trial, the Working Group
notes that, in its reply, the Government did not reject or even discuss the
facts and allegations contained in the communication, particularly those concerning
the reasons for the arrest, detention and conviction of Mustapha Adib and those
concerning the details of the trial proceedings.
17. Thus there was no denial of the fact that the Permanent Tribunal, on the
basis of an administrative decision to dismiss Captain Adib and giving in to
the demands of the prosecutor, had obliged the accused to appear in civilian
dress, whereas, in its final judgement, it had again ordered his dismissal.
That appeared to suggest that dismissal could be decided only by the Tribunal
and that, therefore, prior to that ruling, the accused could still claim to
belong to the army and was entitled to appear in uniform.
18. It was not denied, either, that the accused had been removed from the court
room and judged in absentia and without his lawyers being present - since they
withdrew once he had been removed - only because he had protested against the
systematic rejection of his counsel’s requests, particularly the request
to call witnesses, and had called for a fair trial.
19. It appears from the foregoing that Mustapha Adib was judged by a military
tribunal, which, owing to its composition and the form of appointment of its
members, is a type of court whose independence from the executive power is often
in doubt, but which, in addition, acted in that particular case in a way that
cast doubts on its impartiality by infringing the presumption of innocence of
the accused and by hindering his defence.
20. In this respect and in conformity with its methods of work, the Working
Group considers that, under article 14, paragraph 1, of the Covenant, if a trial
is not conducted by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal, the gravity
of the violation of the right to a fair trial is such as to confer on the deprivation
of liberty an arbitrary character.
21. It should be added, however, that in commenting on the arbitrary character
of Mustapha Adib’s deprivation of liberty, the Working Group took account
of the special circumstances of the case; its conclusions should not therefore
be interpreted as a position of principle regarding the incompatibility of justice
rendered by military courts and the standards of fair trial.
22. With regard to enjoyment of the right to freedom of expression, in view
of the fact that the person concerned was on active military service and expressed
himself through the media, a doubt arises as to how far his right to freedom
of expression extended.
23. Under article 19 of the Covenant, the enjoyment of the right to freedom of expression may, generally speaking, be subject to certain restrictions, if such restrictions are necessary, either for respect of the rights or reputations of others, or for the protection of national security or of public order, or of public health or morals. According to the Covenant, however, these restrictions must be expressly provided by law, and the Human Rights Committee has in the past taken the view that, when a State imposes certain restrictions on the exercise of freedom of expression, these may not put in jeopardy the right itself (General Comment No. 10 on article 19 of the Covenant).
24. With regard to the specific case of military personnel, it is generally
recognized that the right to freedom of expression of officials, police officers
and the armed forces should be subject to certain restrictions owing to the
special nature of the obligations and responsibilities by which they are bound.
In the case in hand, Mustapha Adib, in a letter addressed to the Moroccan authorities
and to the international community to protest against his conviction and detention,
recognizes that Moroccan military personnel, under the regulations of the Royal
Armed Forces, are generally forbidden to publish.
25. Yet even if there has been a breach of regulations, the question of the
disproportionality of the sanction (60 days of military confinement and five
years’ imprisonment, including two and a half non-suspensive) in relation
to the fault committed - which might have merited no more than a disciplinary
sanction - still remains and deserves to be examined.
26. However, considering that neither the information supplied by the source,
nor that supplied by the Government sheds sufficient light on the matter, the
Working Group is not in a position to express an opinion in the circumstances,
neither regarding compatibility of the restriction with the provisions of article
19 of the Covenant, nor regarding the proportionality of the sanction inflicted
on Mustapha Adib for his violation.
27. In the light of the foregoing, the Working Group renders the following opinion:
The deprivation of liberty of Mustapha Adib is arbitrary, as being in contravention
of articles 9 and 10 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and articles
9 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and falls
within category III of the categories applicable to the consideration of cases
submitted to the Working Group.
28. In view of the above-mentioned circumstances and since Mustapha Adib’s
deprivation of liberty has been considered arbitrary within category III of
the categories applicable to the consideration of cases submitted to the Working
Group, the latter has not considered it necessary to decide whether the deprivation
of liberty also falls within category II.
29. Consequent upon the opinion rendered, the Working Group requests the Government
of Morocco to take the necessary steps to remedy the situation and to bring
it into conformity with the standards and principles set forth in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and in the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights.
Adopted on 3 December 2001
E/CN.4/2003/8/Add.1