Algerian court upholds 7-year sentence for French journalist Christophe Gleizes

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TIZI OUZOU, Algeria (AP) — An Algerian appeals court upheld Wednesday a seven-year prison sentence for a French sports writer convicted of “glorifying terrorism,” quashing hopes for an early release.

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TIZI OUZOU, Algeria (AP) — An Algerian appeals court upheld Wednesday a seven-year prison sentence for a French sports writer convicted of “glorifying terrorism,” quashing hopes for an early release.

Christophe Gleizes was sentenced six months ago over an interview with a soccer official accused of ties to a banned separatist movement. He was convicted of violating Algeria’s anti-terrorism laws and possessing publications intended for propaganda, in a case lambasted by rights groups and French media.

A spokesperson for France’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement it regretted the rejection of Gleizes’ appeal and called for his release. “France reaffirms its attachment to freedom of the press everywhere in the world,” they said.

In Tizi Ouzou’s Court of Appeals, Gleizes pleaded guilty, acknowledged “many journalistic mistakes,” and asked the prosecutor for forgiveness and clemency so he could return to his family in France, his Algerian lawyer, Amirouche Bakouri, told reporters.

Gleizes, a 36-year-old freelancer, is the only French journalist imprisoned worldwide, according to French media.

Improving French-Algerian relations and last month’s release of French-Algerian novelist Boualem Sansal buoyed hopes for Gleizes’ appeal. Now, a pardon from Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune is the only way the sports writer can be released.

Gleizes was arrested and placed under judicial supervision in 2024. Authorities say he entered the country on a tourist visa while reporting on JS Kabylie, Algeria’s most historically dominant soccer team, whose successes are deeply enmeshed in the movement to win cultural recognition for the Amazigh minority in the Kabylia region.

The charges against Gleizes stemmed from contact he had with the head of a soccer club who was also a member of a political movement that Algeria designated as a terrorist group four years ago, Reporters Without Borders said at the time.

The region has for decades been an epicenter of rebellion in Algeria. Authorities have, in recent years, clamped down on the region’s Movement for the Self-Determination of Kabylia, the separatist group of which the then-head of JS Kabylie was a member.

Wednesday’s sentencing came days after the arrest of columnist Saad Bouakba, a prominent Algerian journalist now in pre-trial detention.

Bouakba, 79, is accused of “defamation and insulting the symbols of the revolution” after he accused, in a podcast, one of Algeria’s first presidents of misusing funds collected for Algeria’s revolution.

Though some leading media figures have been recently released in Algeria, outlets critical of authorities remain shuttered, journalists are still prosecuted, and foreign reporters are rarely granted visas. Rights organizations have long accused the military-led North African country of using anti-terrorism laws to target political speech.

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