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SIERRA LEONE
For the first time since 1996, no journalist was
killed in Sierra Leone last year, a welcome development in a country that
had earned the dubious distinction of being the most dangerous country
in Africa for journalists.
However, journalists were threatened by former rebels
and government officials alike. In September, seven members of the independent
press received bizarre, identical letters signed by a so-called danger
squad that threatened to kill them for being "enemies of the state."
CPJ sources in Freetown linked the threat to outspoken opinion pieces
on President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah's decision to postpone general elections
from December 2001 to May 2002.
Meanwhile, the Independent Media Commission, established
by an act of parliament to register newspapers, magazines, and radio and
television stations and to advise the minister of information on media
issues, started operating last year. In December, the commission updated
publication licenses for 21 existing newspapers. But the publications
still need approval from the registrar general and income tax department,
which had not been granted at press time.
The commission's mandate includes arbitrating libel
cases and other complaints of journalistic misconduct. In this capacity,
the cash-strapped commission was busy even before its official launch.
By June, it had already received complaints from three former and present
cabinet ministers against Freetown publications.
In addition, journalists faced accusations of corruption
and bribery throughout the year, with several complainants questioning
the media's ethics. For their part, news professionals have voiced worries
about the Commission's independence, given that the head of state appoints
its members.
Meanwhile, the United Nations authorized a war crimes
tribunal for Sierra Leone, after a May agreement between the rebel Revolutionary
United Front (RUF) and the pro-government Civil Defense Force (CDF) militia
to begin disarming and reintegrating their fighters into society.
The tribunal will prosecute the alleged ringleaders
of the country's decade-long civil war, which was marked by exceptional
brutality that included targeting journalists for assassination. In all,
15 journalists were murdered in Sierra Leone between 1997 and 2000. Thirteen
of them were killed by the RUF, infamous for cutting off the limbs of
government supporters at the behest of its controversial leader, Foday
Sankoh, who is currently in prison.
January 25
Abdul Karim Koroma, Independent Observer
THREATENED
Karoma, a reporter for the daily Independent Observer, received
threatening telephone calls after he reported that a former National Provisional
Ruling Council chairman, ValentineStrasser, had been seen begging for
food at Freetown restaurants.
After the article appeared, Karoma's newspaper received a phone call
from former members of a disbanded paramilitary group called the West
Side Boys, who threatened to attack Karoma and other journalists at the
newspaper. Karoma's colleagues said that the former head of the West Side
Boys, John Johnson, alias Junior Lion, was known to be friendly with Strasser.
When the newspaper ran a story about the calls in the next day's issue,
the same people telephoned again to say they were prepared to carry out
their threats.
February 5
Pius Foray, The Democrat
HARASSED
Police detained Pius Foray, owner and editor of the independent Freetown
daily The Democrat, after his newspaper ran a story suggesting
that President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah feared for his life.
The February 5 article, written by Foray, alleged that President Kabbah
had become apprehensive after the January 16 assassination of Congolese
president Laurent-Désiré Kabila and the Sierra Leonean government's
subsequent decision to postpone general elections. As a result, Kabbah
reportedly rotated his security regiment and fired one of his guards because
he was a relative of former president Joseph Momoh's wife.
Journalists at The Democrat said Criminal Investigation Division
officers obtained an advance copy of the news story and a search warrant
before arriving at the newspaper's offices to arrest Foray. They drove
Foray to police headquarters, where he was interrogated by police inspector
general Keith Biddle. Biddle pressured the editor to reveal his sources
for the article, but Foray refused on professional grounds. Police released
the journalist four hours later.
September 25
David Tam Baryoh, Center for Media, Education and Technology
THREATENED
Jonathan Leigh, Independent Observer
THREATENED
Paul Kamara, For di People
THREATENED
Chernor Ojuko Sesay, The Pool
THREATENED
Philip Neville, Standard Times
THREATENED
Richie Olu Gordon, Peep
THREATENED
Pios Foray, The Democrat
THREATENED
Seven local journalists, all longtime critics of the government, received
identical anonymous death threats.
The seven journalists included: Baryoh, head of the Center for Media,
Education, and Technology; Leigh, editor of the Independent Observer;
Kamara, founding editor of For di People; Sesay of The Pool;
Neville of Standard Times; Gordon of Peep; and Foray of
The Democrat.
CPJ obtained a copy of one letter, postmarked September 14 and signed
by an otherwise unidentified "Danger Squad." Titled, "Warning:
Journalists' Hit List," the document named all seven journalists.
"All must die before elections, all these journalists are enemies
of the state," it said.
CPJ sources in Freetown believe that the journalists were threatened
for criticizing the government's decision to postpone presidential and
parliamentary elections. The elections were scheduled for December 2001
but have now been put off until May 2002.
In a press release issued on September 22, the seven journalists said
they reported the matter to the deputy inspector general of police. The
release added: "We wish to believe that unlike other police investigations
in the country, this one [will] not die a natural death."
In early October, the Sierra Leonean government issued a press statement
denying any involvement in the letters. Authorities also accused the seven
journalists of attempting to win international sympathy by publicizing
unsubstantiated news of threats against them.
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