Tunisian Prison Map
Screenshot from ProgrammableWeb where Tunisian Prison Map is featured as the mashup of the day (29 Sept 06). It gets an average rating of 4.5 stars out of 5. Thanks everyone for your votes.
To access the Tunisian prisons map, click here .
Thanks to Alyssa, our colleague in nawaat, the English translation of the backgrounder is now available.
Context
Worse than a taboo the Tunisian penitentiary system is a state affair, a question of national security. All those who dared approach the topic, reveal its secrets or point fingers to its dysfunctions dearly paid their imprudence. The case of journalist Hedi Yahmed is a witness. Convoked by the general attorney of the Republic, he was afterwards forced to resign from his position in the weekly newspaper “Réalités”, then to quit Tunisia following a paper on the Tunisian prisons that he publishedThe article that forced Hédi Yahmed to leave his country, RAP 21, Newsletter N° 16/2003 Presse Freedom Special. This article is available on reveiltunisien.org. on 12th December 2002 in the frame of the celebration of the international day of human rights.
In front of this omerta by the governing authorities and its determination to muzzle the press and the organisations of defence of human rights as soon as they approach this “forbidden zone”, it becomes impossible to have an idea about the exact number of prisons and penitentiary institutions, to know the criminality rate in the country or the number of the prison population. As Fathi Tourzi a UNICEF consultant rightly recalls “since 1992, there is a kind of blockade on the numbers of offences, even violent offences. (…) there is no advantage to inquire into the prison population.” “violence au quotidian” by Ridha Kéfi – Jeune Afrique no. 2372, issue 25th June 2006. Even the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) that managed to obtain an authorisation to visit the Tunisian prisons after years of transactions with the regime could only visit a limited number of prisons, and conduct only half of planned detainees visits.
Often presented as a good pupil of the international institutions, Tunisia did not make public its statistics with regard to this sensitive dossier until The Seventh United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice Systems (1998 – 2000). The regime complied while keeping well from revealing the secrets of its penitentiary system. Tunisia was amongst the rare countries over 92 participants to the enquiry to provide no information on its prisons, although solicited by the UNO organisms. Hence, one cannot find in the final report any trace of data relating to:
- Adult and juvenile prisons, penal institutions or correctional institutions
- Staff of adult or juvenile prisons, penal institutions or correctional institutions, by
sex, and financial resources
- Persons incarcerated, by category of incarceration
- Adult prisoners: time spent in prison awaiting trial
- Adult prisoners: time actually served in prison after conviction
- Persons on probation, by age group, selected day
-
Persons on parole, by age group, selected day
- Convicted prisoners, by sex and age group, selected day
How can one explain the security obsession of the Tunisian regime when we want to approach this forbidden zone that is prison? Normally, only information that could constitute a real threat to the national security should be kept hidden. Like for example the information on the military and defence system. As pointed out by Astrubal, “how does it come that while surfing on the web, we find a literally naked Tunisia by the detailed description of its armed forces?” « Réponse élémentaire dirait Watson : Question de sécurité nationale », Astrubal, 13th September 2004. when there is no information about its penitentiary system?
While in other countries the freedom of information includes the public right to access information detained by the public authorities, in Tunisia we are confronted with security obsessed reflex and a pseudo requirement of national interest, thus depriving the citizens from their elementary right of being informed. That justifies the lead cover imposed by the local authorities who, under biased pretences do no longer feel any obligation to publish categories of essential information about the country and hence the censure about divulgation of any information on the criminality rate or the number of prisons and its population… as if these information belonged to private heritage of the governing authorities! Otherwise, on which scientific basis is the national policy for prevention of criminality, as well as investments in the penitentiary system are decided? On which bases are Tunisian deputies voting the allocation of credits in terms of criminality? Which objective elements would be supporting any efforts to plan the social rehabilitation of previous detainees? Moreover, which indicators would support the evaluation of the judiciary/penitentiary policy to prevent the repetition, to lessen criminality, while respecting the international standards on the matter?
Nevertheless, if one can add credit to the Tunisian League for Human Rights report on the Tunisian prisons titled “the walls of silence” published on 7th October 2004, there are 29 penitentiary institutions and 7 youthful detention centres. According to statistics emanating from various sources, like the UNO and the European Council, in 2002 Tunisia stands with its 253 prisoners for every 100’000 inhabitants in 4th position amongst the most repressive countries on the planet, even ahead of China, Israel and Brazil « Le système carcéral en chiffres, les pays les plus répressifs », Le Monde diplomatique, June 2003..
The impressive number of prisons that surpasses the number of governorates (there are 24 governorates in Tunisia, while we count 3 prisons in Bizerte among which the obscure Borj Erroumi) can be interpreted in two ways:
- The high criminality rate and thus the number of incarcerated population leading to building more prisons. However, this explanation is contradicted with the impossibility to access non divulgated statistics for improbable reasons, like the one invoked by a local responsible to justify this black-out: “1. Tunisia is a tourist country such information would affect its image. 2. the country lacks of statisticians that can tactfully manipulate such data. 3. if they were made public, these data could be used in a malevolent way by the opposition” « Violence au quotidien », Op. Cit..
- The concern of the authorities to create prisons of proximity. Even this pretence does not stand the evidence that the government policy to keep prisoners away from their place of residence is inflicting upon them and their families a kind of “double sorrow”. This policy which was reported and condemned by human rights NGOs is one of the most insidious that is used by the regime to poison the life of prisoners and their families.
It may be important to remind that there are 3 levels in the Tunisian penitentiary system:
- There are prisons and detention centres ;
- There is the long term solitary confinement of political prisoners, qualified as “prison within prison” ;
- There is the house arrest, the judiciary harassment and the administrative control. A fearful arsenal to deprive ancient political prisoners from their right of movement, of work and which is aimed towards pure banishment such in the case of journalist Abdallah Zouari, who is under house arrest in Zarzis in the south of the country, whereas his legal domicile and his family are in Tunis, in the north (see map).
The Map
The map consists of a mashup work (a technique of mixing composite applications and services exposed on the web to form a new service). This map displays:
- An approximate listing of Tunisian prisons indicated on a Google Maps API + GMapEZ. In order to elaborate the list, I have pulled data from Human Rights NGOs report as well as a temporary list of Tunisian prisons prepared by Tsar Boris on TUNeZINE website. Similarly, I am intending to completed and improve this work. It is to be noted that only the markers pointing to Tunis 9th April prison, Gorjani detention center, Borj Erroumi, Nadhor and Bizerte city prisons are exact. All others indicate an approximate positioning, generally the main town of a district that bears the name of the prison.
- Video/audio files hosted on YouTube related to Tunisian political prisoners.
- Flash animations that I have realized and put online on my Blog [fikra] or on Nawaat.
- Some photos of individual cases.
- The version Y !Q Beta of the contextual search tool of Yahoo (Ajax+HTML).
The link to the Tunisian Prisoners Map.
PS: You can contribute to improving this map and enrich it by providing information or help me to find the exact positioning of the prisons on the map. If you are sure of the positioning of one prison, please use this map:
Choose hybrid as type of map. From the menu bar on the right side of the map select Tunisia. Expand the map. Localize the prison. Centre the position of the prison. Double click. Copy the “latitude/longitude of the prison that will be automatically displayed under the map in the indent Map Information. Send to me. Thank you!





Tunisian Prisoners Map | The Skeptic الشكاك 4:30 pm on October 1, 2006 Permalink |
[...] A Google Map hack in the service of political prisoners in Tunisia, from the tireless and innovative Sami ben Gharbia. Nice work, Sami. [...]
Long Road » Bloggers Making a Difference 4:25 pm on December 21, 2006 Permalink |
[...] Unlike the celebration over at Time, this group recognizes the disparities that exist and they are using the web to challenge that—the Tunisian Prison map is a perfect example of just how the technology can be used to show the underside of “globalization” and the military industrial complex. [...]
Center for Citizen Media: Blog » Blog Archive » Mapping Human Rights Violations 11:06 pm on December 21, 2006 Permalink |
[...] To creat the Tunisian Prison Map, Sami Ben Gharbia “pulled data from Human Rights NGOs report as well as a temporary list of Tunisian prisons prepared by Tsar Boris on TUNeZINE website.” [...]
Prisoners and killers -- mashups at Amanda Raymond-Banerji 1:57 am on December 25, 2006 Permalink |
[...] Here’s a NYT interactive on killers and their victims; here’s a mashup of Tunisian prisons. Thanks, BoingBoing! Tunisian exile Sami Ben Gharbia is the creator of the Tunisian Prison Map — an idea inspired by a New York Times interactive map charting murder locations in New York City. Instead of showing government figures on crime, he’d display where his former government was behaving criminally, imprisoning political dissidents for daring to speak out.When you click on a place-mark on Gharbia’s Google Maps mashup, a pop-up reveals details, stories and videos of prisoners and their families. The map is compelling and provocative, and it’s one more reason Gharbia, who now lives in the Hague, says he can’t go home. [...]
Class Acts » Is Meatspace Becoming Obsolete? 3:08 pm on January 2, 2007 Permalink |
[...] On the global side, map mashups are quicky proliferating as a tool for awareness, journalism, and political lobbying. The Tunisian Prison Map was somewhat of a landmark in political mashup history (as recent as it has been!). Another interesting case is Greenpeace France’s Genetically Engineered Corn Google Maps mashup. After the French Government banned the mashup, Greenpeace France created crop circle symbols to mark the sites in real life. The interplay between online and offline information is becoming more graceful, more common, more suited to the needs of the people, and more easily authored by laymen. Map mashups are, after all, a Web 2.0 phenomenon. [...]
Citizen Media Watch » Mashups as a journalistic - and political - tool: Tunisia example 10:44 pm on January 15, 2007 Permalink |
[...] The Tunisian Prison map is a great example of how you can use mashups as a base for journalism or political lobbying. Based on a google map, Sami Ben Gharbia has pinpointed Tunisian prisons and shows information about prisoners and what crimes they are convicted of. If you click on one of the pointers, you get an information overview, links to more info, and often a YouTube video clip about it. One example – information about the prison of Kef: 2- Thecase of the Youth of Kef condemned for downloading an mp3 (See the flash animation here) of a HipHop song criticizing the brutality of the Tunisian police service (more info here and here)- (an other flash animation about the song). [...]
Razvan Cranganu » Blog Archive » O puscarie … ceva … 9:57 am on January 17, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Daca sunteti prin Tunisia si vreti sa va duce-ti putin la racoare (e destul de cald pe acolo) aveti aici o harta cu puscariile de acolo. Asta in caz ca va vin idei. [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Looking beyond the US for activist inspiration 9:25 pm on January 18, 2007 Permalink |
[...] – Sami Ben Gharbia’s Tunisian prison map. By plotting the location of documented and secret prisons on a Google Map, Sami offers a powerful graphic representation of the reach of a repressive government, linking to information and video about the dissidents held at these sites. [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Online activism, from Brazzaville to Bahrain… 2:58 am on February 14, 2007 Permalink |
[...] These sorts of efforts to protect the rights of bloggers against frivolous lawsuits, legal prosecution and other forms of harrasment are becoming a major part of blogger activism around the world. Global Voices has just brought Sami Ben Gharbia on board as our new Advocacy Director – he’ll be helping build linkages and cooperation between blog advocacy efforts around the world and featuring stories about free speech advocacy on the website. We’re very lucky to have a seasoned activist like Sami to help lead our team – as Quinn Norton pointed out in Wired News a few weeks back, he’s one of the leading innovators in the blogosphere, with projects like the Tunisian Prisons Map. [...]
Global Voices Online » Blog Archive » 10:54 pm on February 27, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Sami is an experienced human rights campaigner, a Tunisian who has lived in exile in the Netherlands for the past seven years. He first joined the GV community as a result of the comments thread when we featured his Tunisia Prison Map back in September 2006. This innovative and exciting mashup of different digital media and tools subsequently gained much attention in the media. [...]
frizzyLogic » Good things 3:01 am on March 11, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Hold that openDemocracy thought, we’ll be coming back to oD a bit later. Because this is where the filaments multiply beyond my ability to keep a single thread. We’ll continue with GV and another great thing which is the appointment of Sami Ben Gharbia as our new Advocacy Coordinator. Yes, for those of you with good memories, the same Sami Ben Gharbia of the Tunisian Prison Map about which I waxed lyrical last year. [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » SXSW: Blogging where speech isn’t free 5:48 pm on March 13, 2007 Permalink |
[...] In countries that threaten but don’t entirely shut down speech, like Iran, China and Egypt, we often see a strong move into citizen media – the rise of the Iranian blogosphere in 2003-5 is strongly correlated to a crackdown on the independent press, and a large number of journalists moved from banned papers to publishing blogs. I pointed to a couple of favorite examples of activism in citizen media: Sami ben Gharbia’s Tunisia Prisoners map, the Zimbabwe Council of Trade Unions video of protesters being beaten, Alaa’s blog from prison, the Bahrain land use maps featuring Google Earth footage. I point to some of the ways that states try to shut down online media: blocking sites (pointing to Nazret.com and the blocking of Ethiopian blogs), blocking tools (pointing to Pakistan’s Don’t Block the Blog campaign), registering bloggers (pointing to Mahmood’s Den and activism around resisting registration) and arresting bloggers (poining to the Free Kareem campaign.) [...]
En qué estaría yo pensando » Blog Archive » Sobre bloggers 12:58 am on April 2, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Sami Ben Gharbia es un tunecino que, imitando una idea del ayuntamiento de Nueva York, utilizó Google Maps para crear una página web interactiva sobre las cárceles de su país, donde el anterior gobierno había recluido a presos políticos. Si vas pinchando en cada uno de los marcadores, colocados encima de las cárceles, aparecerá información sobre los prisioneros, ya sea en forma de animación, texto o vídeo. [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Democrats invent the remix, only three years after the Tunisians 6:27 pm on April 7, 2007 Permalink |
[...] I assumed that the Tunisian remix was a response to the Obama remix. I thought it was especially poingant because, no matter how you feel about DOS-based PCs or Hillary Clinton, neither is as Orwellian as Tunisia, where government censorship of media is widespread, political rights are curtailed and dozens of dissidents find themselves imprisoned or exiled. I’d planned on using the mashup to open a talk in New York next week, talking about how techniques of the read/write web can spread between activist communities around the world. And then I looked at the date on the file. [...]
Jikomboe » Global Voices Online: Ukurasa wangu ni “chuma” kuliko ukurasa wako 12:53 pm on April 13, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Sasa teknolojia imebadili namna tulivyokuwa tunaelewa na kutengeneza ramani. Ramani siku hizi unaweza kuweka picha, maandishi, video, sauti, n.k. Unaweza kuzifanya ramani hizo kuwa na uwezo wa kuweka taarifa mpya kila zinapojitokeza. Mfano mmoja unaonijia haraka ni Ramani ya Magereza Tunisia iliyotengenezwa na Sami. Sami ni Mkurugenzi wa Utetezi wa Global Voices. [...]
links for 2007-04-17 at überthings, inc. 12:34 am on April 18, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Tunisian Prison Map Heard about at Ethan Zuckerman’s talk. This is where geo mashups start to get interesting. One wag in the audience asked whether they had prison ratings yet. Ha. (tags: activism citizenjournalism gmaps mashups tunisia prison) These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Never thought of using it that way… 3:37 pm on May 18, 2007 Permalink |
[...] I’m interested in the ways that activists are finding to repurpose online tools, like my friend Sami ben Gharbia’s Tunisian Prisons map. My guess is that the folks who made it possible to mash up Google Maps hadn’t thought about their use as a human rights advocacy tool. My favorite example of repurposing recently is my friend Alaa’s use of Twitter to coordinate activities of activists in Egypt. [...]
النشاط الألكتروني للمدوّنين التونسيين at [fikra] فكرة 12:36 pm on June 16, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Map [...]
MediaChannel.org 6:19 pm on July 16, 2007 Permalink |
[...] mashups, such as the powerful Tunisian Prison Map that is shining a light on a repressive regime’s stifling of political [...]
Readers Edition » Bürgermedien: Ein Zwischenbericht 7:21 pm on July 31, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Potential, den Journalismus zu verbessern, atemberaubend ist. Map mashups, so wie die mächtige Tunisian Prison Map, die ein Licht wirft auf ein unterdrückendes Regime, das abweichende politische Meinungen [...]
خارطة السجون التونسية « [fikra] فكرة 7:23 pm on August 22, 2007 Permalink |
[...] المراقبة الأمنية والإدارية و إجراء الإقامة الجبرية التي تـُبقي السجناء بعد قضاء محكوميتهم على ذمة الأجهزة الأمنية و العقابية. و هي ترسانة تحرمهم من أبسط الحقوق الأساسية كالحق في التنقل و الشغل و العيش الكريم. و تد تـُستخدم هذه الأساليب لغرض النفي كما تشهده حالة الصحفي و السجين السياسي السابق عبد الله الزواري الذي نـُفي منذ خروجه من السجن في سنة 2002 إلى جنوب البلاد، 500 كلم، بعيدا عن عائلته المقيمة في تونس العاصمة و حُرم من حقه في التنقل باسم تراتيب المراقبة الإدارية (شاهد الخريطة). [...]
Center for Citizen Media: Blog » Blog Archive » Medios ciudadanos: un informe del progreso Medios ciudadanos: un informe del progreso Medios ciudadanos: un informe del progreso Medios ciudadanos: un informe del progreso Por Dan Gillmor Traduci 12:10 am on August 28, 2007 Permalink |
[...] Los mapas aglomerados, tales como el poderoso Tunisian Prison Map que está prendiendo una luz sobre la sofocación del disentimiento político en un régimen [...]
Andy Worthington » Blog Archive » “We would rather be back in Guantánamo,” say Tunisians Abdullah bin Omar and Lofti Lagha, returned in June 5:42 pm on September 3, 2007 Permalink |
[...] map of Tunisian prisons from the website Tunisian Prison Map (which, unsurprisingly, is banned in [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Pop!Tech - Dialog with/in Islam 10:39 pm on October 20, 2007 Permalink |
[...] stories I’ve reported in depth – Google Earth banned in Bahrain, Sami ben Gharbia’s map of Tunisian secret prisons, and about Wa’el Abbas’s films of government officials stuffing ballots boxes and [...]
Pop!Tech - Dialog with/in Islam : Wonderful Thoughts 7:34 am on October 21, 2007 Permalink |
[...] stories I’ve reported in depth – Google Earth banned in Bahrain, Sami ben Gharbia’s map of Tunisian secret prisons, and about Wa’el Abbas’s films of government officials stuffing ballots boxes and [...]
Luis Villa’s Blog / Notes from NYLS Amateur Hour 6:20 pm on November 2, 2007 Permalink |
[...] google maps of hotornot and the Tunisian Prison Map; notes that what each are doing is aggregation of small, tiny bits of information into larger, more [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Introducing the Access Denied Map 7:11 pm on November 15, 2007 Permalink |
[...] tool posted on the Global Voices Advocacy site. In the spirit of projects like his much-celebrated Tunisia Prisons Map, this tool uses visualization to make a point about social phenomena, in this case, the rise of [...]
Nawaat » Blog Archive » Internet et Espace public : Le cyberactivisme tunisien 3:36 am on January 10, 2008 Permalink |
[...] peut citer la manifestation en ligne de Yezzi.org ou encore la Carte des Prison Tunisiennes [3]. Sur ces espaces médiatisés, les défenseurs de la démocratie voient dans l’internet un [...]
NetSquared N2Y3 | Tactical Philanthropy 6:34 pm on February 20, 2008 Permalink |
[...] * Tunisian Prison Map pulls from a variety of sources to locate the prisons on a map and links to videos and other [...]
Science Commons » Blog Archive » Netsquared hosts data mashup challenge 10:46 pm on February 25, 2008 Permalink |
[...] at some of their favorite mashups in this area – Maplight.org, ChicagoCrimes.org, ActiveTrails, and Tunisian Prison Map projects. To find out how you can apply, visit their Web [...]
…My heart’s in Accra » Mashups for social change 12:17 am on March 20, 2008 Permalink |
[...] on the power of the mashup. The site advertising the contest features Sami Ben Gharbia’s Tunisia Prison Map as an example of the sorts of amazing social change purposes maps can be put [...]
La carte des prisons tunisiennes « [fikra] فكرة 6:39 pm on March 22, 2008 Permalink |
[...] la résidence surveillée, le harcèlement judiciaire et le contrôle administratif. Un arsenal redoutable pour priver les anciens prisonniers politiques de leur droit à la circulation et au travail et qui est détourné à des fins de bannissement pur et simple, comme l’illustre le cas du journaliste Abdallah Zouari, assigné à résidence à Zarzis, dans le sud du pays, alors que son domicile habituel et sa famille se trouvent à Tunis, au Nord (voir la carte). [...]
Hermanngasse Blog » Blog Archive » reboot10 - Follow Up 3:52 pm on November 12, 2008 Permalink |
[...] Tunisian Prison Map [...]
Manuale sul design che aiuta l’advocacy | Fundraising.it 3:30 pm on November 21, 2008 Permalink |
[...] più sufficiente la parola ma servon strumenti di visualizzazione veloci ed interattivi (ad esempio questa mappa delle prigioni in [...]