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MALI
Although Mali's press laws include punitive presumption-of-guilt
standards, the media environment is reasonably liberal compared with many
other African countries. Mali also has a strikingly diverse press corps,
with about 40 private newspapers, some in French and others in vernacular
languages, and about 100 radio stations, one fifth of them unlicensed.
Mali's only television network is state-run, however,
and the government has failed to implement a licensing regime that was
included in a progressive broadcasting law passed nine years ago. The
Internet is still in its infancy, mainly because landline telephone service
is erratic.
On March 26, Malians commemorated the 10th anniversary
of the popular uprising that brought down dictator Moussa Traoré
in 1991. Meanwhile, at least five politicians from the ruling party announced
they would challenge President Alpha Oumar Konar in the presidential elections
scheduled for 2002.
In July, the government eliminated jail as a penalty
for ordinary libel, although libel is still classified as a criminal offense.
Reporters convicted of "offenses" against the head of state,
ministers, or public institutions now face three to 12 months in jail,
down from six months to five years.
Meanwhile, aggrieved officials and citizens continued
to settle personal scores with journalists. On July 25, three men kidnapped
and roughed up Abdoulaye Ladji Guindo of the weekly Liberté
for an article denouncing corruption in the sugar industry.
Guindo was abducted a few months after attending
a seminar on the use of investigative journalism to combat corruption,
which has evidently reached troubling proportions in Malian society. In
March, a Bamako judge grilled Communications Minister Ascofaré
Ouleymatou Tamboura, who is suspected of stealing money allocated for
the expansion of the state telecommunications company, SONATEL.
Western donors, who have consistently praised Konaré,
were concerned when the president announced plans for a referendum to
grant himself total immunity from prosecution. Under popular pressure,
Konar cancelled the referendum in late November. Opposition leaders, for
their part, spent the year warning against ballot fraud during next year's
vote.
May 22
Sidiki Konaté, ORTM
IMPRISONED
Konaté, head of the Office of Radio and Television in Mali (ORTM),
was convicted of criminal defamation by a court in the town of Segou,
some 80 miles north of the capital, Bamako.
The Autonomous Union of the Magistracy filed charges against both ORTM
and the mayor of Bamako, Ibrahima N'Diaye, after a March 26 television
show in which the mayor accused Malian magistrates of being corrupt and
inefficient.
Konaté was sentenced to a month in prison and a US$1,350 fine.
The mayor received a 30-day jail sentence and a US$4,000 fine.
Malian press and human rights organizations condemned the decision,
as did CPJ in a May 22 statement.
Shortly after Konaté was sentenced, the union withdrew its complaint
and closed the case.
July 25
Alboulaye Ladji Guindo, Liberté
ATTACKED
Guindo, publisher of the Bamako-based private weekly Liberté,
was kidnapped by three men and held for several hours, during which time
he was threatened and roughed up.
According to Guindo, the abduction came in reprisal for an editorial
in that week's issue of Liberté in which he denounced allegedly
illegal schemes used by local businessmen to corner the sugar market.
The article implicated Amadou Djigué, a prominent Bamako entrepreneur
whose Djigué-SA company is one of Mali's biggest sugar suppliers.
Guindo, who claimed that Djigué's son was one of the kidnappers,
was held for several hours at Djigué-SA headquarters, where the
men bombarded him with angry questions, punctuated with death threats,
about the editorial.
Guindo told Agence France-Presse that he had no doubt that Amadou Djigué
masterminded the attack. He later filed a formal complaint accusing Djigué
of kidnapping and torture, but no progress had been reported in the case
as of December 31.
September 26
Joan Baxter, BBC
HARASSED
Said Penda, BBC
HARASSED
Baxter, a correspondent for the BBC English Radio and Television Service,
and Penda, a correspondent for the BBC French Radio Service, were arrested
and detained by Republican Guard officials in downtown Bamako.
The two journalists had gone to the center of Bamako's market district
to cover merchant protests against the erection of a new barrier around
the U.S. embassy. U.S. officials ordered the construction of the barrier
after the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington,
D.C.
Merchants objected to the plan, saying it would force them to move and
would greatly diminish their sales. They also complained that the United
States offered them no compensation for having to relocate their businesses.
At around 1:00 p.m., when Baxter and Penda approached merchants at the
scene, Republican Guard officials stopped the journalists and confiscated
their equipment. Embassy officials protested the arrests, telling the
officers that such action was not part of their instructions.
Nevertheless, officers detained Baxter and Penda in front of the embassy
for three hours without charge before taking them to the central police
station. Once there, authorities interrogated the journalists for an hour
to determine whether they had authorization to report on the "tense"
situation around the embassy.
After police recorded Baxter and Penda's personal information, they
returned the seized equipment and released them unconditionally.
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