New York, January 27,
2009--The Palestinian Authority
(PA) has detained at least three journalists in the West
Bank since Saturday, according to local news reports and journalists
who spoke to CPJ.
On Monday, security
forces detained Ahmad Bekawi, correspondent for the London-based al-Quds TV
station in Jenin. They also detained Samer Khuaira, the Nablus correspondent for the same station, on
Saturday, news reports said. Issam al-Rimawi, a cameraman with the PA-aligned
Palestinian News Agency, Wafa, was detained by security forces on Monday.
Although Wafa would not confirm the detention of its cameraman, local
journalists told CPJ that al-Rimawi has been detained. All three are still
being held.
Another correspondent
for al-Quds TV in Ramallah, Ibrahim al-Rantisi, was interrogated for several
hours today by security forces, according to local journalists. Al-Rantisi was
released after his interrogation. CPJ's calls to al-Rantisi for comment were
not immediately returned.
"We're troubled by
this spate of journalist detentions in the West Bank and the secrecy
surrounding them," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ's Middle East
and North Africa program coordinator. "The Palestinian Authority must explain why it had detained
these journalists or release them immediately."
Nawaf al-Amr, the West
Bank coordinator for al-Quds TV, told CPJ that on Saturday Palestinian
Preventive Security summoned Khuaira to its offices in Nablus. He was detained upon arrival, al-Amr
said, adding that Khuaira has since been transferred to a prison in Jenin.
Although the reason
for Khuaira's detention remains unclear, al-Amr said he believed it was a
reaction to the station's interview with Abdul Sattar Qassim, a prominent
political opponent of the PA and former candidate for the chairmanship of the
Palestinian Authority.
Bekawi was asked to
appear at the offices of Military Intelligence and was detained immediately,
al-Amr told CPJ. Local journalists told CPJ that they have not heard from Bekawi since his detention.
Since June 2007, when Hamas seized control of Gaza and PA President Mahmoud Abbas dissolved the Palestinian government, journalists
and publications alike have become pawns in an internal power struggle. In the West Bank, the PA has maintained a ban on the
distribution of publications that it perceives to
be pro-Hamas. The de-facto Hamas government in Gaza has taken similar steps. Fatah, the
dominant political faction in the PA, has frequently detained journalists who
have not towed the official Fatah line.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This alert has
been updated with the correct spelling of Ahmad Bekawi's name.