Case History
Tal Al-Mallouhi was detained on December 27, 2009, after being summoned by State Security Branch 279 in Damascus for questioning about her blog entries. Two days after her detention, Syrian state security officials raided her family home and confiscated her computer, notebooks, and other personal documents and belongings. Al-Mallouhi was held incommunicado at an undisclosed location without charge or access to her family for nine months, until late August 2010, when her detention was publicized. Al-Mallouhi’s family originally sought her release through diplomatic relations and negotiations and therefore did not want any publicity on the case. However, on September 2, 2010, her mother published an open letter to the Syrian president seeking information on her daughter’s welfare and calling for her immediate release. In the letter, her mother described the intense suffering felt by the entire family at her daughter’s detention without any confirmed cause. Her family was finally allowed to visit her for the first time at Doma Prison in Damascus on September 30, 2010, but has not been permitted to visit her since.
On February 14, 2011, in a closed session, the Damascus State Security Court convicted Tal Al-Mallouhi of “divulging information to a foreign state” and sentenced her to five years in prison. The court did not disclose any evidence or details to justify the verdict, and it is widely believed that she is being targeted for posting poetry and other writings concerning political and social issues on her online blog.
WRITING BY TAL AL-MALLOUHI
Tal Al-Mallouhi’s Blog
(In Arabic)
Tal Al-Mallouhi’s Blog
(In English)