Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Gambia:Swazi Prince Threatens Journalists Who ‘Write Bad Things'

Sent by Muhammed Keita/CPJ

The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns death threats and outrageous claims made last week by a member of Swaziland's royal family against local journalists over their critical coverage of the country's leadership. During a July 21 public forum called the Smart Partnership National Dialogue in the central commercial city of Manzini, Prince Mahlaba, brother of Swaziland's absolute ruler King Mswati III, was quoted by local media as saying: "I want to warn the media to bury things that have the potential of undermining the country rather than publish all and everything even when such reports are harmful to the country's international image.

Journalists who continue to write bad things about the country will die." The prince also accused the media of peddling lies, saying: "It's a fact that journalists earn their living by writing lies and if they do not write the lies then their source of livelihood is threatened and this is fact and beyond debate."

The senior prince was responding to a question at the forum from the queen about why the media was portraying the country negatively, local journalists told CPJ.

Mbogani Mbingo, managing editor of the independent Times of Swaziland, told CPJ the threats were "dangerous" and could not be taken lightly since the prince was a member of a highly influential royal advisory council, the Swazi National Council Standing Committee (SNC)." The SNC advises the king on public policy, including media matters.

"The government of Swaziland must immediately reject the death threats against journalists by a leading member of the ruling family," said CPJ Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita. "We call on the government to issue a clear and unequivocal statement condemning this murderous outburst and ensuring the international community that Swaziland is committed to the protection of all journalists."

Comfort Mabuza, the National Director of the local chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa condemned the threats and feared they could incite the public against the journalists. "We are in big trouble because his view may be representing that of SNC, which advises the king," Mabuza told CPJ. "The council is yet to call him to order and we are really concerned about their continued silence."

In Swaziland, Africa's last absolute monarchy, the government persists in intimidating journalists who write about the monarchy, leading to censorship and self-censorship, according to CPJ research.



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Monday, July 26, 2010

Gambia:Ghana Police Criminally Prosecute Journalist Over Sources

Sent by Muhammed Keita/CPJ

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45737000/jpg/_45737696_attaaaaaaa.jpg
President John Atta Mills of Ghana speaking to reporters
New York,-The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on Ghana's attorney general to drop prosecution of prominent journalist Ato Kwamena Dadzie under the 1960 criminal code in an attempt to get him to reveal his sources.The Criminal Investigations Department of the Ghana Police Service on Monday charged Dadzie, acting editor of Accra-based private station Joy FM, with publishing false news "with intent to cause fear and alarm," defense lawyer Shadrach Arhin told CPJ. Dadzie is free on a bail bond of 5,000 cedis (US$3,430) and faces a misdemeanor offense carrying a maximum sentence of two years in prison or a fine, according to his lawyer. Police referred the case to the attorney general's office for legal advice, he said.

In a July 6 story, Joy had suggested that the Ghana Real Estate Developers Association had recently withdrawn their petition opposing a US$10 billion housing construction deal between the government and a South Korean company after receiving death threats in text messages, according to local journalists and news reports. Dadzie was charged after he refused to tell police names of members who were allegedly threatened.Peace FM in Accra quoted  police spokesman Kwesi Ofori this week as saying that the police were acting in the interest of "protecting life and property" in order to apprehend whoever sent the threatening text messages.  "We call on the attorney general to dismiss this outrageous criminal charge against Ato Kwamenia Dadzie," said CPJ Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita. "The police should not intimidate a journalist into disclosing his sources."Ghanaian Minister of Information John Tia Akologu dismissed the allegations of threats in a press statement as a "concocted report cloaked in investigative pretentions," and demanded a retraction, according to news reports. In the same statement, Akoglu ordered police to investigate the claims. In a subsequent interview with JoyOnline, Joy FM's website, the executive secretary of the developers association subsequently denied that there had ever been threats.

In a press statement on Thursday, Ghanaian Minister of Information John Tia Akologu said the government was not "interested in criminalizing speech and/or sending any journalist to court" but accused the media of "hiding behind press freedom to deliberately peddle falsehood and in other cases hate mongering." 



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Friday, July 23, 2010

Gambia News:EU Warns Against Execution of Coup Plotters in The Gambia



Convicted coup plotters
The European Union (EU) has warned the Gambia government not to carry-out any executions on the eight convicted coup plotters, including ex-CDS Tamba and seven others.Read the full text of the press release issued by the spokesperson of High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security policy/vice president of the Commission Catherine Ashton.


 "The EU urges the Gambian authorities not to carry out any executions against the convicted individuals, and expects the authorities to respect their right of appeal and to take all necessary steps to ensure that their right to a fair trial is fully guaranteed.

The European Union reiterates its longstanding position on the use of death penalty and recalls the importance of UN Resolutions calling for the establishment of a moratorium as a first step towards abolishing the death penalty. It takes note of the Gambian abstention in the respective votes, and encourages The Gambia to actively support a similar Resolution expected to be tabled during this year's UN General Assembly.

The European Union encourages The Gambia to keep its commitment of exercising moratorium with a view to considering the abolition of the death penalty for all crimes. Such a step would be in line with the global trend towards abolition."



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Monday, July 19, 2010

Gambia:In Guinea, Media Hopeful With Democratic Transition

Sent by Community to Protect Journalist/CPJ

Transitional leader Sekouba Konaté casts his vote in June's  historic elections in Guinea. (Reuters)
Transitional leader Sekouba Konaté casts his vote in June's historic elections in Guinea. (Reuters)
Guinea
's historic presidential elections and new constitution are changing the media landscape in the West African country. Since last month, the military-led Transitional National Council has passed two new laws decriminalizing defamation and created a new media regulatory body.

This country's progression toward embracing democracy makes it hard to believe that the "Guinean Massacre" occurred less than a year ago. On September 28, 2009, military soldiers violently dispersed a banned opposition rally at a stadium in the capital Conakry, killing dozens of people and assaulting at least a dozen journalists covering the gathering. Nasser Diallo, a reporter with Conakry private station Radio Nostalgie, managed to escape death on that tragic day and has continued broadcasting from exile. "This new law is a huge relief for me," said Diallo, who broadcasts a radio show on Blogtalkradio from a mini studio in his Brooklyn home. "Its entry into force will give us a hope of having an independent press."

The new press laws replaces a 1991 press code that infamously allowed, among other things, dead people to be plaintiffs in defamation lawsuits against journalists accused of causing outrage to their memory.  

In lieu of prison sentences, journalists now face fines, ranging from 500,000 to 20 million Guinean francs (US$100 to US$4,000). "The paradox is that the fines are so high that journalists think they prefer prison," said Boubacar Algassimou Diallo, political editor of the private weekly Le Lynx, the largest circulation newspaper in the country. He explained that printing costs could account for as much as 67 percent of the budget of producing a newspaper, let alone pay a fine. "When you say 5 million Guinean francs (US$975), a journalist prefers to go to prison for three days. He knows that once in prison, with the pressure of Media Foundation of West Africa, CPJ, and Reporters Without Borders, he will be released," he added.  

In a special report released this week—"Guinea: Journalists are the Forgotten Victims of Violence"—London-based anticensorship organization Article 19 expressed concern that the new law upholds "a number of restrictions incompatible with international standards and good practice" such as "offenses of libel against the Head of State, slander and false report."

Notwithstanding, for the first time, the press law includes provisions recognizing the country's growing electronic media: More than 20 news websites (often based abroad) have correspondents in Guinea. "Online media is filling the gap of information resulting from the absence of private dailies. They are inevitable," according to Diallo of Le Lynx. Under the new law, online journalists will be entitled to press cards so long as they can show a master's diploma in journalism or two years of professional experience, explained Amadou Tham Camara, who heads the Guinean Association of Online Press (AGUIPEL). The new law requires all news sites to register with the new media regulatory agency and identify their local correspondents, who will act as their legal representatives, he told CPJ. The agency will have the power to order the suspension or ban of websites after repeated offenses.

Abdoulaye Diallo, New York bureau chief of Guinéenews, a leading independent news site based in Canada, participated in the drafting of the new legislation, welcomed the law creating a new media regulatory agency known as HAC. "It essentially provides guarantees for the body to become more independent from state/government control by providing more representation and control over media and press to private news organizations and corporations," he wrote in an e-mail.

The online platforms have opened the doors for Guineans all over the world to participate in the electoral process and influence the debates at home. On Election Day in New York for instance, the nonprofit organization Alliance Guinea enlisted volunteers at Columbia University to sift through thousands of text and e-mail messages reporting voting incidents in Guinea. The reports were collected through crisis reporting platform Ushahidi. Alliance Guinea co-founder Jennifer Swift-Morgan, told CPJ via e-mail that their efforts included regular TV and radio spots "encouraging everyday people to be active in monitoring the elections themselves and texting in what they see" before, during, and after the polls. In Conakry, Diallo of Le Lynx pointed out that the Ushahidi citizen reporting initiative faced the challenge of verifying the credibility of the reports it received. Swift-Morgan said they collected several hundred useful messages that were mapped and shared with the electoral commission CENI as well as national and international media tracking the elections.

As the international community praises Guinea for having a successful democratic election, the country awaits a scheduled runoff on July 18. The Supreme Court has to make a decision regarding recent allegations of politicians manipulating the counting of votes to confirm the accuracy of the numbers of the two leading candidates. Earlier this month, AGUIPEL suspended the membership of Guinee24 news website on the grounds that it violated electoral regulations by publishing undocumented polls favoring candidate Alpha Condé, Camara told CPJ. 

Mariama Keita is an intern in CPJ's Africa program. Mohamed Keita is CPJ's Africa advocacy coordinator.

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Gambia News:Gambia Day of Action - UK

Amnesty_logoThe Amnesty International coordinated global campaign against human rights violations in Gambia is at an advance stage with the D-Day just about 48 hours away.In the United Kingdom, the organizers have announced the nature of the events and routes of the protests.Amnesty_logo
A statement from the UK organizing committee said that the Thursday demonstration will taking place in two venues, the meeting point for those coming from London and other places being Trafalgar Square at 12pm.
"The Day of Action will first start at Nigerian High Commission at 9 Northumberland Avenue London WC2N 5BX and the nearest tube is Charing Cross on Northern and Bakerloo Line. Time is from 12.30pm to 1.30pm," the statement read.
The organizers say that while at Nigerian High Commission, they will deploy two people to hand our protest petitions to the Common Wealth Secretariat at Marlborough House.
From the Nigerian High Commission, the protesters will proceed to the Senegalese Embassy at 39 Marloas Road, Kensington London W8 6L – the nearest tube being High Street Kensington on Circle District and Piccadilly Line. Time is 2pm to 30pm.
"T-Shirts and campaign information sheets are available but it is advised that we appear in black clothing," the statement concludes
.
Source:www.jollofnews.com


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Gambia:50 Years On, Francophone Africa Strives For Media Freedom

Sent by Muhammed Keita/CPJ

By Robert Mahoney/Deputy Director

A Congolese man removes a  portrait of Belgium's king in Leopoldville on July 22, 1960, at the end  of colonial rule. (AP)
A Congolese man removes a portrait of Belgium's king in Leopoldville on July 22, 1960, at the end of colonial rule. (AP)

CPJ has joined with African press freedom groups to urge African leaders to end repression of the media as they celebrate 50 years since the end of colonial rule. We will publish a series of blogs this week by African journalists reflecting on the checkered history of press freedom over that period.

This year is the 50th anniversary of independence for many countries in sub-Saharan Africa from colonial powers France and Belgium. To mark the event, French President Nicholas Sarkozy has invited African leaders to Paris for the July 14 Bastille Day celebrations. One thing that hasn't changed much in the last half a century is that the presidents and prime ministers on the Champs Elysees reviewing stand can rest assured that media back home will dutifully report on their speeches and appearances.

Countries in French-speaking west and central Africa may have modified the one-party rule and state media monopolies that characterized the region for the first 30 years after independence but only a handful of nations boast a truly independent and critical press.

The euphoria among many local journalists at the fall of the Berlin Wall and an end to Cold War rivalries playing out on African soil was not followed by the hope for flourishing of sustained media freedoms. Instead, the 1990s brought terrible civil wars and genocide in Rwanda. Those political upheavals did not spell good news for press freedom.

In the last decade, private media companies have emerged to challenge the state stranglehold on news and information but European-educated political elites from Dakar to Kinshasa are rarely shaken by serious investigative or critical reporting.

Broadcasters and newspapers controlled or influenced by the state still dominate public discourse. The online revolution that is churning up media landscapes in the Middle East and Asia and giving voice to hitherto unheard writers has not yet reached most of sub-Saharan Africa. There, online news sites and news blogs are in their infancy. Internet use is low, hampered by poverty, poor communications infrastructure, and even frequent power outages. Those domestic blogs that do exist reach only a tiny audience and their subject matter rarely rises above the purely local. In contrast, diaspora French-language websites have become forums for uncensored news, activism and political dissent. These include U.S.-based TamTam.info a leading news site on Niger, Belgium-based Camer.be, a must-read for expatriate Cameroonians, and Canada-based GuinneeNews, which made up for the absence of daily newspapers in Guinea by covering this month's historic election. 

Many older Francophone African journalists lament what they see as a deterioration of standards in journalism including corruption of the profession by political and commercial interests. Young reporters who challenge authority do so often at great personal risk since only a lucky few have the backing of rich or powerful media outlets. French-language African newspapers are based on the same uncertain economic model as their counterparts in the West. In fact the independent ones tend to have tiny circulations, limited to a small number of cities where rates of literacy and income are higher than in rural areas.

In the last 10 years, some authoritarian regimes have become more sophisticated in controlling news, using criminal prosecutions, imprisonment, harassment and intimidation as a last rather than first resort. Where independent or opposition-backed media have emerged, ruling elites now use their deeper pockets to buy the latest technology to modernize old state-controlled outlets or create new ones which shrink the audience for critical voices. A well financed, technically superior newspaper like Les Dépêches de Brazzaville in Congo, or the radio station Rema FM in Burundi, have overshadowed rivals. In countries where press freedom advocates have scored victories, such as the decriminalization of defamation in Ivory Coast for example, governments have fought back. The media group Le Réveil in Abidjan has been slapped with hefty damages for its political coverage in a number of civil libel judgments which it is appealing. Other forms of soft repression include withholding of government advertising, denial of publishing and broadcast licenses and access to capital.

Fortunately the picture is not uniformly bleak. Radio, particularly private and community broadcasts, are a growing force. Market entry is relatively cheap. Radio also overcomes the illiteracy problem and taps into Africa's oral tradition. Low-range community stations have sprouted in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and private radio is thriving across the region whether as individual businesses or as part of newly formed conglomerates that include print and TV interests.

Another hope for news distribution in the region is the popularity of mobile phones and SMS texting. Without adequate landlines or 4G wireless for Internet carriage, this relatively low-tech medium might play to Africa's ingenuity for low tech fixes.



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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Gambia News:EX-CDS Tamba,Seven Others Sentenced to Death

 

The High court in The Gambian Capital, Banjul has on Thursday 15 July 2010 convicted the country's former Army Chief of Staff Lt.General Lang Tombond Tamba and seven others to death.
We will bring you full details of the court proceeding in our subsequent editions.Please watch out.


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Ghana News:Newspaper Journalist Abducted

Sent by Media Foundation for West Africa/MFWA

Dauda Mohammed, a photographer of privately-owned The Insight newspaper was on July 12, 2010 reportedly abducted by unidentified persons in Accra while taking pictures of a private mansion belonging to Ghana's former President Jerry John Rawlings.

The managing editor of the newspaper, Kwesi Pratt Jnr. told Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) that Mohammed was picked up about 17:00 Hours and that his whereabouts remain unknown.

Duke Tagoe, a colleague of Mohammed, who accompanied him, told an Accra-based Joy FM radio station that the photographer was bundled into a BMW vehicle with registration number GW 8180 R and whisked away to an unknown destination.

The case has been reported to the police who have begun investigations.

However, an aide to the former President, Kofi Adams, has denied any knowledge and involvement of the security guards of the ex-president in the reported abduction. He told Joy FM that the former first family was not interested in the kidnapping of any journalist.

Last week,  Nana  Konadu Agyemang Rawlings , the  wife  of  the ex-president, had  claimed   on a  radio station that  the former  first  family had nowhere to live, since their official residence  got  burnt on February 14.  The government and other critics have doubted the claim by the former first lady.  Pratt is one of such critics, who claim that Rawlings and his family could not be homeless since they own private houses.

Kwame Karikari (Prof)
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-30-22 4 24 70
Fax: 233-302-22 10 84
Email:
mfwa@africaonline.com.gh,alerts@mediafound.org
Website:
www.mediafound.org 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




 

 

 

 

 

 


 


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Monday, July 12, 2010

Gambia News:Musa Saidykhan’s Torture Case Adjourned To September 21

Sent by Media Foundation for West Africa/MFWA

Former Independent
editor Musa Saidykhan

The ECOWAS Community Court has again adjourned hearing of Musa Saidykhan's torture case  to  September  21, 2010 to enable  the Gambian  government, the defendant  in the  case,  to  respond to amendments filed by  the plaintiff.The adjournment followed a request by Tale Aladi, a Nigerian lawyer, who represented the Gambia authorities, when the case was called on July 8. Saidykhan's counsel had filed a motion asking the court for leave to amend their earlier brief. 
The defence counsel informed the court that they were yet to receive a copy of   the amended brief.The case was adjourned for motion and adoption of written addresses.
Saidykhan, a former editor-in-chief of the banned Banjul-based The Independent newspaper, was among several victims who were illegally detained and suffered all manner of cruelty at the hands of the Gambian security agents in the aftermath of an alleged coup attempt in March 2006.Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) initiated the action on Saidykhan's behalf in order to seek justice for him.
 


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Saturday, July 10, 2010

Gambia:Rwandan Editor Arrested After Criticizing President Kagame

Sent by Muhammed Keita/CPJ
http://www.opednews.com/populum/uploaded/rwanda-president-paul-kagame-lea-20100314-33.jpg
Rwandan President Paul Kagame escorted by body guards
while inspecting
military officers.

Police in Rwanda arrested the editor of a private newspaper on Thursday in connection with a series of articles critical of the government, according to local journalists. 

Agnès Uwimana was taken into custody in the capital, Kigali, over allegations that her Kinyarwanda-language weekly Umurabyo had published stories "inciting the public to disobey," "articles related to division and ethnicity," and "rumors that can cause disturbance in the country," Rwandan National Police spokesman Eric Kayiranga told CPJ today. Kayiranga said police acted in the public interest and would take Uwimana to court next week.

Umurabyo, which rose to prominence in April following the government's closure of leading private papers Umuseso and Umugizi, had in recent editions raised questions about a number of sensitive topics, including last month's murder of journalist Jean-Léonard Rugambage, the fallout between President Paul Kagame and two now-exiled military leaders, and reports alleging lavish government spending on luxury jets, according to local journalists. One story criticizing the government was headlined, "The Hammer Has Begun Killing the Fly," a reference to April remarks in which Kagame declared that, "if necessary, we will kill the fly with a hammer." Kagame was discussing generals who fled after being accused of involvement in grenade attacks earlier this year.

"Once again, Rwandan authorities invoke national security and the legacy of the 1994 genocide to silence one of the few dissenting voices in the shrinking independent Rwandan press," said CPJ Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita.  "We call on authorities to release Agnès Uwimana immediately; she should not go to prison for expressing her views a month before presidential elections."

Uwimana had been imprisoned in 2007-08, serving a one-year sentence on charges of ethnic divisionism and libel after she published an op-ed on the topic of ethnic violence in Rwanda, according to CPJ research. Last month, Rwanda's Media High Council Board Chairman Arthur Asiimwe accused Uwimana of publishing "defamatory articles and falsehoods" in a story suggesting that all Rwandans were both victims and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide, according to news reports.

Only a handful of independent newspapers, including Rushyashya, Umusingi, and Gasabo, have continued to publish in Rwanda under increasing self-censorship, according to local journalists.



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Friday, July 9, 2010

Gambia:CPJ, African Groups Call For Press Freedom Commitment

Sent by Muhammed Keita/CPJ
 
 
Heads of State Francophone African nations

Your Excellencies:

As you gather in Paris for festivities that celebrate your nations' 50 years of independence, we, the undersigned African press freedom advocates petition for your public commitment to a free, vibrant, and self-sustaining press as a cornerstone of the development of francophone Africa in the next five decades.

Following independence, single-party rule in francophone Africa often sought to restrict the press to the role of government messenger. Yet the post-independence press produced outstanding journalists and, with the advent of democratization in the 1990s, media liberalization allowed the expression of a greater number of voices, which represent the natural range of diverse opinions among your citizens. In countries where the free press has been allowed to flourish, there has been greater political stability and transparency in public affairs.

Many governments, however, still respond to press scrutiny with imprisonments, intimidation, repressive laws criminalizing critical coverage, and politically motivated censorship. Some authorities have mistakenly sought to justify repression by invoking the example of the notorious Rwandan station Radio des Milles Collines, which was a government-controlled outlet, not an independent one. Governments have also cited a lack of news media professionalism in defending their restrictive actions. While private news media do face the challenge of instilling professionalism with scarce societal resources, most have in fact acted with a degree of responsibility that surpasses many other institutions.

We, the undersigned, request that your leadership:

  • Decriminalize defamation. Civil remedies have proved to be wholly sufficient in holding the press accountable while upholding press freedom and freedom of expression. 
  • Hold accountable under the law all persons, including government officials, police, and security forces implicated in crime and abuses against journalists. Impunity for officials and security forces undermine the rule of law and the public's confidence in the government. 
  • Abandon state-run press regulatory agencies, which have been used time and again to silence diverse and critical voices.
  • Ensure that licensing of broadcast media is fair, competitive, and apolitical.
  • Implement the Declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression in Africa that was adopted by the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights in 2002.
  • Enact and implement freedom of information laws in accordance with the principles of the declaration, which states that "public bodies hold information not for themselves but as custodians of the public good."

As leaders of countries that are signatories to the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights, we call on you to use this historic milestone as an opportunity to renew your adherence to the fundamental rights enshrined in these international conventions and your national constitutions, and strengthen your efforts to implement your obligations under the treaties.

You have to come to Paris for an extraordinary gathering of African leaders. It provides an opportunity for multilateral discussions of your nations' post-colonial achievements and the challenges ahead. Your renewed commitment to a free and independent press should be at the top of your agenda. It is a vital and achievable goal, and it is a pre-requisite to successfully handling the many other issues facing the continent. Through its critical and sometimes adversarial relationship with governments, the press is a partner in your goal of achieving a democratic, prosperous, and free Africa.

Sincerely,

Committee to Protect Journalists

Faith Pansy Tlakula, African Union Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression

International Federation of Journalists (Africa Regional Office)
International Union of Francophone Press

The African editors Forum (TAEF)
Panafrican Press
Association (APPA)

African Journalists in Exile (JAFE)

West African Journalists Association


 


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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Gambia News:Glasgow Plays Its Part In Gambian Human Rights Campaign

Sent by Madi Njie

Alieu Badara Sowe.jpg

Picture:MP Anas Sarwar (left) with journalist
Alieu B. Ceesay from the Gambia.

Glasgow is one of 16 centres around the world which will highlight human rights abuse in the Gambia on Thursday 22 July.
Gambian born journalist, Alieu Ceesay, is leading the Glasgow campaign through the National Union of Journalists and Amnesty International.
Said Alieu: 'We will hold a vigil at the Donald Dewar statue in Buchanan Street and invite passers -by to sign a petition,'
Added Alieu: 'Currently, there is a harrowing human rights situation for Gambian people. Citizens are arrested daily. People disappear. There are summary executions, detention without trial, curtailment of civil liberties and a compromised judiciary. Ebrima Manneh, a journalist who worked with me on the same daily newspaper was arrested by security agents in July 2006 and has never been seen again.

Deyda Hydara, the editor and co-proprietor of another daily paper was shot dead and in July of last year, six of my colleagues were jailed on charges of sedition for simply criticising the President in print 'The well-documented facts are listed in reports by Amnesty International and other human rights organisations.
Already, newly elected Westminster MP Anas Sarwar, has taken an interest in Alieu's campaign. Last year, when the NUJ held a similar vigil, he attended the event and subsequently, when he was campaigning to be elected, he promised to help. Said Mr Sarwar: 'I will raise this in Westminster and will bring it before the International Development Select Committee.'  Elected by Labour MPs as one of the dozen people on the influential cross-party committee, Mr Sarwar will have a powerful say in its work of scrutinising expenditure, administration and policy of the Department for International Development. That Department has an office in Gambia and recently invested £3million in development projects there. The situation has also been recognised by the Commonwealth of which Gambia is a member. At the last Heads of Commonwealth meeting – in Trinidad earlier this year - a synchronised campaign by its Human Rights committee, successfully embarrassed Gambian President Yaya Jammeh into not attending but sending his Foreign Minister,Ousman Jammeh, instead.
 Course: www.localnewsglasgow.co.uk/2010/07/glasgow-plays-its-part-in-gambia-human-rights-campaign/




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Senegal News:Minister’s Loyalists Assault Journalist, Threaten Him With Death

http://armelopost.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/abdoulaye_wade_.jpg
President Abdoulie Wade of Senegal

Najib Sagna, a reporter of the Wal Grand Place, a privately-owned Dakar-based daily newspaper was in the morning of July 6, 2010 reportedly attacked by four assailants including a relative of Madam Coumba Gaye, a Senegalese minister of state.The assailants physically attacked Sagna at about 11: 45 GMT, while he was on his way to work.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)'s correspondent in Senegal reported that the attack followed an article Sagna wrote in the July 5 edition of the newspaper that the assailants were not pleased with.The correspondent said although the article with the headline: "The little Secrets of the little Minister", did not mention the name of any minister, the loyalists of Madam Gaye claimed the article was referring to her.

Sagna told the correspondent that he recognized two of his assailants "they were Ndeye Gaye, the minister's sister, and Baye Ndoye, the one who held a microphone during a demonstration the minster organized last week".The reporter said Ndeye Gaye told him that writing an article on her sister; meant signing his "death warrant".



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Gambia News: ECOWAS Court To Fix Date For Judgment Of Musa Saidykhan’s Torture


 Sent by Media Foundation for West Africa Print E-mail

Today, July 8, 2010, the ECOWAS Community Court will continue with the hearing of a case of torture brought against the Gambian authorities by a victim, Musa Saidykhan, a Gambian journalist now in exile. 

Saidykhan, a former editor-in-chief of the banned Banjul-based The Independent newspaper was among several victims who were illegally detained and suffered all manner of cruelty at the hands of the Gambian security agents in the aftermath of an alleged coup attempt in March 2006.

At the last hearing on June 3, Saidykhan painted a gory picture of how he was tortured by members of President Yahya Jammeh's security guard and he became unconscious for about thirty minutes. He was crossed examined together with a Senegalese medical doctor who treated him after he fled the Gambia.

The court is expected to adopt written addressees filed by both parties before fixing a date to deliver its verdict.

 Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) initiated the action on Saidykhan's behalf in order to seek justice for him.

 Issued by MFWA on July 7, 2010

The MFWA is a regional independent, non-profit, non-governmental organization based in Accra. It was founded in 1997 to defend and promote the rights and freedom of the media and all forms of expression.


For more information please contact:

Kwame Karikari (Prof)
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-30-22 4 24 70
Fax: 233-302-22 10 84
Email:
mfwa@africaonline.com.gh This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , alerts@mediafound.org This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Website:
www.mediafound.org



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Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Gambia News:Today, 7 July 2010 Marks The 4 Years Disappearance of Chief Ebrima Manneh

By Madi Njie
http://cpj.org/Briefings/2008/gambia08/Family.jpg

He was last spotted at his work place, at the premises of the pro- government private own Daily Observer newspaper, where he reported to work, fresh from coverage, as the paper's correspondence at the President's residential office, State House, and never return back home, since 7 July 2006.

Mr. Manneh, commonly called Chief Manneh  was said to have been picked up by personnel, suspected to be members of the country's security agents. Eye witnesses said plain cloth personnel came to Daily Observer and asked for Mr Manneh, and the disappeared journalist to follow them in a waiting white car, which drove heading towards Bakau Police station, and later was seen driving towards the capital, Banjul. Manneh's colleagues present said on his way to Banjul, Manneh waived his colleagues, telling them that he was going to come back to the office, to continue his evening work on a news article he was working on. 


Manneh's elder Brother, Lamin Manneh and Father- Sarjo Manneh said they have conducted search for Manneh at his work office, but the then managing director of the Daily Observer newspaper Dr.Saja Taal,told him that the office is not the right place to search for their love one. Manneh who was in his late seventies, under ill-health challenges said he was advised to liaise with the security apparatus of the country.

From there he met the then director of NIA,Mr.Hare Sambou,at his office in Banjul, who said the missing journalist is not in their custody, and that the NIA is not the only arresting agency, and asked him to check with the Gambia Police Force, who also denied that Mr Manneh is not in their custody.The old Manneh said to journalists repeatedly that he attempted to meet the Vice President Isatou Njie Saidy at her residence, but was prevented by soldier guarding at the gate.


Mr. Manneh has since been missing and no one seems to know his exact whereabouts. Local papers have in separate instances reported that he was seen at Sibanor Police Station in the Foni District, Western Division, Sare Njai Police Station in the Upper River Region and despite calls by local and international media groups, nothing has yet come out of it. The Media Foundation for West Africa has decided to take the bull by the horn and filed court action against The Gambia government in the ECOWAS Court . The Gambia government has ignored calls for release of Mr Manneh, opted for contempt by its no call, no show attitude. The ECOWAS Court also demands that Manneh be released and compensated US$100, 000.

Chief Manneh's continuous disappearance has attracted widespread condemnation at national and international levels.  Until his arrest 4 years ago, Ebrima Manneh was the breadwinner of his family and his continuous incommunicado detention has left his old parents in a desperate situation. His brothers' and sisters' education were halted, up to the time of the GPU branch in USA and partners, who in 2009, facilitated some sponsorship to the family's education and related needs.


Local reports have it that Mr. Manneh was reported to Daily Observer's management, by a colleague, for attempting to reproduce in the paper, a BBC online report critical of the government. A Community to Protect Journalists CPJ report indicates that article featured a photo with the caption "Meeting Hosted by Yahya Jammeh Who Came To Power Through A Coup," and it discussed a proposed AU Charter on democracy that opposes military coups and constitutional amendments to extend terms in office. Daily Observer insiders revealed that during this period, Manneh squabbled with the newspaper's Managing Director, Dr. Saja Taal; who is constantly accused by staff of using his political influence to victimize dozens of innocent young journalists as well as other staff working under him.

Mr. Manneh was also in 2007, reportedly spotted at the Royal Victoria Hospital , but taken away to The Gambia National Guards' Clinic shortly thereafter to prevent greater exposure. Unconfirmed sources also reported Manneh was some times in 2007 detained at Mile Two Prisons. Manneh, the Daily Observer's State House correspondent, was arrested a week after the African Union Summit held in Banjul in 2006.

His elder brother, who served as a soldier, was intimidated, prevented from getting any job opportunity by the authorities who often threaten those who employed him, to dismiss him. He reported to have been put under surveillance by the NIAs, who were monitoring his daily activities. He left the country and now leaves in the USA on asylum.





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Monday, July 5, 2010

Gambia:Somali Government Harassing Journalists As Fighting Rages

Sent by Muhammed Keita/CPJ

Clashes continue in Mogadishu as the  government seeks to limit the reach of reporters. (AFP)
Clashes continue in Mogadishu as the government seeks to limit the reach of reporters. (AFP)

Somali government forces have been increasingly harassing independent journalists covering violent fighting in Mogadishu, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

Somali reporters targeted for their reporting included a New York Times correspondent and a CPJ International Press Freedom Award winner, while nine other journalists were injured this week while reporting during deadly clashes between government troops and Islamist rebels, according to news reports and CPJ interviews.

On Thursday, police detained award-winning journalist Mustafa Haji Abdinur and freelance cameraman Yusuf Jama Abdullahi for taking pictures of their colleague, Associated Press photojournalist Farah Abdi Warsame, who had been hit by crossfire, according to the National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ). Officers at the Criminal Investigation Department interrogated the journalists for several hours and forced them to delete their photographs, Abdinur told CPJ. They were released without charge. Warsame was rushed to Medina Hospital for shrapnel wounds in his hand and back, and is now recovering at home, according to NUSOJ.

Last week, New York Times correspondent Mohammed Ibrahim fled the country following threats from government security forces, he told CPJ. Ibrahim had contributed reporting to a June 13 New York Times article, "Children Carry Guns for a U.S. Ally, Somalia," concerning child soldiers within the government forces.

"The reaction of the Somali government to these very serious allegations is both frightening and typical," said CPJ East Africa Consultant Tom Rhodes, who is based in Nairobi. "Instead of addressing this very serious issue, security forces are persecuting reporters. Journalists must be allowed to do their job." 

In response to the story, the deputy commander of the Somali military, Adbdulkarim Yusuf Adam, held a June 24 press conference in which he accused those involved in publishing the article of having ties with terrorist organizations, local journalists told CPJ.  Adam also declared that all individuals involved—whether foreign or local—would be taken to court, according to the same sources. Government spokesman Abdi Kadir Walayo claimed the article had been fabricated in a June 29 Voice of America interview.

Ibrahim said he received a warning from a friend while at a local restaurant last week that security forces were coming to arrest him, and later heard that more than 20 police officers came to the restaurant after he left. The journalist went into hiding and fled the country on June 26.

The government's director of communications, Abdirashid Hashi, told CPJ that Ibrahim is "a good friend" and should contact him in order to settle the matter with the security forces.  

Somalia is the most dangerous country in Africa to be a journalist, with 33 journalists killed since 1993. The most recent killing was in May, when gunmen shot Radio Mogadishu journalist Sheik Nur Mohamed Abkey outside his home in the capital.



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