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    UPDATE 1-Tunisia to try 3 journalists in morality dispute

    (Adds that two were released pending trial, lawyer's quote)

    TUNIS, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Three Tunisian journalists

    face trial on morality charges after publishing a photograph of

    a footballer frolicking with a nude woman, raising fears of a

    media crackdown by the country's new Islamist rulers.

    The Attounissia newspaper printed a photograph on Wednesday

    of German-Tunisian football player Sami Khedira of Real Madrid

    dressed in a tuxedo with his hands covering the breasts of his

    otherwise naked German model girlfriend, Lena Gercke.

    The photograph drew an angry response from the country's

    public prosecutor who ordered the detention of Nasreddine Ben

    Said, Attounissia's publisher, Habib Guizani, its editor-in-

    chief, and Hedi Hidhri, the editor of its world section,

    according to Chokri Nafti, a spokesman for the justice ministry.

    The three were accused of offending public morality. Two

    were released late on Thursday pending trial but Ben Said

    remained incarcerated, his lawyer Chokri Beleid told Reuters.

    The trio were the first journalists to be arrested since the

    revolution a year ago ousted Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, who had

    censored the media.

    "Ben Said's imprisonment is illegal and is aimed at

    terrorising media... The judiciary used the same law that Ben

    Ali used to pursue journalists and it is being utilised to

    strike down enemies just as it was under Ben Ali," Beleid said.

    The arrests have raised fears among secular Tunisians that

    the Islamist-led government will increasingly seek to censor

    material it deems offensive to its religious morals.

    Tunisia's journalists' union called in a statement for the

    "immediate release of all journalists and the rejection of

    intimidation against reporters."

    On Facebook, thousands of Tunisians launched a campaign to

    support the journalists and to defend freedom of expression.

    "This issue is political and aims to quell the voice of the

    media and stop it criticizing the government .. it is a very

    serious indicator," Jihen Lagmari, a journalist at Attounissia

    told Reuters.

    She added that journalists at the newpaper had received

    anonymous phone calls threatening to set fire to the building,

    which is being guarded by police.

    The government, led by the moderate Islamist Ennahda party,

    came to power in elections in October and is facing strong

    opposition in secularist newspapers.

    Its critics have also spoken out against its decision to try

    a local television channel for showing Persepolis, a film whose

    animated depiction of God outraged conservative Salafi

    Islamists.

    Tunisia's once-staid media has enjoyed a new lease of life

    since the removal of Ben Ali, but activists say the government

    is now seeking to impose new controls.

    Last month, hundreds of journalists demonstrated outside the

    office of the prime minister to demand an end to restrictions on

    media freedoms after the appointment of government officials and

    editors to state television positions.

    The government has repeatedly denied accusations it is

    seeking to stifle the media.

    (Editing by Lin Noueihed and Andrew Osborn)

     

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