Police teargas anti-slavery activists outside Mauritania parliament

Police teargas anti-slavery activists outside Mauritania parliament
Police attacked demonstrators who were calling for the release of anti-slavery campaigner and new Mauritanian MP Biram Ould Dah Abeid with teargas and truncheons.
2 min read
09 October, 2018
Mauritania police attacked activists [Twitter/GriffonageJusti]

Mauritanian police clashed with anti-slavery activists demanding the release of an imprisoned legislator on Monday, as the country's newly-elected National Assembly held its maiden session. 

Police used truncheons and teargas to disperse demonstrators who had gathered outside parliament in Nouakchott to call for the release of anti-slavery campaigner and new MP Biram Ould Dah Abeid.

Abeid is president of an unlicensed NGO called the Initiative for the Resurgence of the Abolitionist Movement. 

He has been in custody since early August after a journalist filed suit against him for "slander, insults and incitement to hatred."

"Nine people were injured," including Abeid's wife, a spokesman for the protesters, Hamadi Ould Lehbouss, said.

"These are young people who came to demand the release of the MP and leader who has been unjustly imprisoned," he told AFP

"People are having fun ignoring the case and holding him in prison in defiance of any reason."

Translation: a demonstration by anti-slavery activists demanding
the release of their leader
should not be subjected to this much violence by
the Mauritanian state.
How is this violene justified?

Remnants of traditional slavery have become a major issue in Mauritania, a deeply conservative, predominantly Muslim state. 

Under a generations-old system of servitude, members of a "slave" caste are forced to work without pay, typically as cattle herders and domestic servants, despite an official ban that makes slavery punishable by up to 20 years' jail.

No official figures exist for those still enslaved, but some NGOs estimate that up to 43,000 people remained in bondage in 2016, accounting for around one percent of the population.

Inside parliament, the first session of the National Assembly elected last month got underway with the approval of Cheikh Ould Baya as speaker.

Baya is a former colonel and ally of President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, whose second and final term of office ends next year.

Baya, best known outside of Mauritania as his country's chief negotiator on fishing quotas, was approved by 118 votes to 27.

Abdel Aziz's Union for the Republic was the big winner in legislative, regional and local elections held on September 1 and 15, with an Islamist party coming a distant second.

Abeid, the runner-up in 2014's presidential election, also won a seat.