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FEBRUARY 12, 2004
Posted: February 19, 2004
Telesphore Namukama, Radio Sauti ya Rehema
IMPRISONED
Radio Sauti ya Rehema
CENSORED
Agents of the Direction de la Sécurité et du Renseignement,
(Security and Intelligence Services, or DSR) arrested Namukama, host of
the Swahili-language radio program "Let Us Plead for Justice." The program
airs on the community radio station Sauti ya Rehema (Voice of Mercy),
which is based in the town of Bukavu in eastern DRC. The DSR are the local
equivalent of the Kinshasa-based National Intelligence Agency, or ANR,
and were controlled by the rebel Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD) during
DRC’s four-year civil war before a multiparty transitional government
was inaugurated in Kinshasa in 2003. It is unclear whether the Kinshasa
government fully controls the DSR.
Namukama’s arrest stemmed from his February 10 program, during which the
journalist spoke about arms caches hidden in the South Kivu Province,
of which Bukavu is the main town, and concluded that peace was unlikely
to be established in the area in the near future. During the program,
DSR agents came to the station and forced the journalist off the air,
replacing the show with music.
Two days later, on February 12, the agents returned and arrested Namukama,
accusing him of "sowing turmoil in the minds of the people." He was held
for 48 hours at the DSR headquarters in Bukavu before being released without
charge. According to Joseph Nkinzo, director of Sauti ya Rehema, Namukama
was forced to promise that he would no longer broadcast programs dealing
with politics.
During the civil war, the RCD imposed a media code on areas it controlled,
barring community radio stations from broadcasting news and political
analysis. Now that the RCD is no longer formally in power in eastern DRC,
local journalists say it is unclear whether the central government will
enforce this rule.
Sauti ya Rehema is affiliated with Heritier de la Justice (Inheritor of
Justice), a Congolese nongovernmental organization that works to defend
human rights in Bukavu. The station is also funded by the local Protestant
Church and international aid organizations.
MARCH 15, 2004
Posted: March 24, 2004
Robert Kadima Baruani, Radio-Télévision Kin-Malebo
Milla Dipenga, Radio-Télévision Kin-Malebo
Eric Ambago, Radio-Télévision Kin-Malebo
ATTACKED, HARRASSED
Cameraman Kadima Baruani, assistant cameraman Dipenga, and journalist
Ambago, all of Radio-Télévision Kin-Malebo, were attacked
in the capital, Kinshasa, by police and detained for three hours, according
to local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED).
The incident occurred while the three journalists were covering a police
operation to remove residents from a building whose ownership is in dispute.
JED said police manhandled the journalists and confiscated their equipment.
Cameraman Kadima Baruani was hit in the face.
MARCH 19, 2004
Updated: March 29, 2004
Jean–Denis Lompoto, Pili–Pili
IMPRISONED
Prosper Dawe, Pili–Pili Angwalima, Pili–Pili
HARRASSED, LEGAL ACTION
Lompoto, publications director for the newspaper Pili–Pili,
was arrested. He was transferred to Kinshasa Central Prison on March 21,
according to local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED). The
arrest warrant charges Lompoto, Pili–Pili Editor Dawe, and
Pili–Pili journalist Angwalima with defaming Minister of
Mining Eugène Diomi Ndongala.
The charges stem from a March 3 article in Pili–Pili alleging
that the minister had siphoned off US$60,000 from companies managed by
his ministry, according to JED.
Lompoto told a JED representative who visited him in prison that he had
been brought before a magistrate on March 20 but was not allowed a hearing
with legal representation. No trial date has been set. Dawe and Angwalima
went into hiding following Lompoto's arrest.
Lompoto was released March 27 on bail of US$100.
MAY 19, 2004
Posted: June 7, 2004
Updated: August 10, 2004
Lucien-Claude Ngongo, Fair Play
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Ngongo, deputy editor of the weekly newspaper Fair Play, was detained
on defamation charges brought by wealthy expatriate businessman William
Damseaux. Local journalists said he was questioned about articles denouncing
practices by Damseaux in relation to a longstanding court battle with
Berge Nanikian, another expatriate businessmen based in Kinshasa. CPJ
staff visited Ngongo in Kinshasa prison on June 6, along with representatives
from the local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED). Ngongo
told CPJ he was questioned about an article signed by stringer Grégoire
Agboya; judicial authorities, Ngongo said, believed he wrote the story
himself under that pseudonym.
Ngongo was granted a provisional release on July 28, after paying bail
equivalent to about $10, according to JED. His trial began on August 2.
MAY 21, 2004
Updated: July 26, 2004
Rakys Bokela, Le Collecteur
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Bokela, editor of newspaper Le Collecteur, was imprisoned in Kinshasa,
the capital of Democratic Republic of Congo, on criminal defamation charges.
A CPJ representative and members of the local press freedom group Journaliste
en Danger (JED) visited the journalist in Kinshasa Prison on Sunday, June
6.
The charges against Bokela were filed by the former president of the Congolese
boxing federation, Aimé Luvumbu, in connection with a February
18, 2004, article in Le Collecteur titled "Aimé Luvumbu
should be in the central prison," according to JED. The article accused
Luvumbu of malfeasance when he was head of the boxing federation. Bokela
told CPJ he had been asked repeatedly to reveal his sources, and that
judicial authorities think he wrote the story, which he says he did not
author.
The delegation that visited the journalists in prison included CPJ Africa
Program Coordinator Julia Crawford; Dr. Philippe Dahinden, of the Switzerland-based
Hirondelle Foundation, who is consulting for CPJ's mission as an independent
expert; JED President M'baya Tshimanga; and JED Legal Adviser Charles-Mugagga
Mushizi.
Bokela was granted a provisional release on June 13.
MAY 27, 2004
Updated: July 26, 2004
Albert Kassa Khamy Mouya, Le Lauréat
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Kassa, former publication director of the weekly newspaper Le Lauréat,
was imprisoned in Kinshasa, the capital of Democratic Republic of Congo,
on criminal defamation charges.
A CPJ representative and members of the local press freedom group Journaliste
en Danger (JED) visited the journalist in Kinshasa Prison on Sunday, June
6. Kassa, who is diabetic, already appeared to be in fragile health.
The charges against Kassa stem from a March 2004 article in Le Lauréat
about a legal battle between expatriate businessmen William Damseaux and
Berge Nanikian, according to JED. Damseaux's lawyer, Marceline Tshitoko,
brought the charge, claiming that the article defamed her.
Kassa told CPJ that Grégoire Agboya, an occasional stringer for
Le Lauréat, wrote the piece, but that judicial authorities
were holding him responsible as the publication director at the time the
report was printed. Kassa says he left Le Lauréat in January,
but that the newspaper continued to print his name as its publication
director after his departure.
Congolese law states that if the author of an offending article cannot
be found, either the publication director or the editor can be held responsible.
The delegation that visited the journalist in prison included CPJ Africa
Program Coordinator Julia Crawford; Dr. Philippe Dahinden of the Switzerland-based
Hirondelle Foundation, who accompanied CPJ's mission to DRC as an independent
expert; JED President M'baya Tshimanga; and JED Legal Adviser Charles-Mugagga
Mushizi.
Kassa's health deteriorated rapidly in prison, leading CPJ and JED to
press the authorities for his release on health grounds. He was finally
granted a provisional release on June 29 after being hospitalized on June
21.
JUNE 2, 2004
Posted: June 4, 2004
Joseph Nkinzo, Sauti ya Rehema
Ben Kabamba, Radio Maria
Kizito Mushizi, Radio Maendeleo
Serge Maheshe, Radio Okapi
THREATENED
Sauti ya Rehema
Radio Maria
Radio Maendeleo
RTNC
CENSORED
Radio Maria
Radio Maendeleo
ATTACKED
According to the local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger and other
local sources, Nkinzo, director of the radio station Sauti ya Rehema (Voice
of Mercy), narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in the morning, when
rebels who took control of the town of Bukavu, in eastern DRC, on June
2 came looking for him and murdered his younger brother. The rebels arrived
at the journalist's home, smashed windows, and demanded to know where
Nkinzo was. Believing that Nkinzo's brother was the journalist, the rebels
killed him and looted the house.
Kabamba, director of Radio Maria; Mushizi, director of Radio Maendeleo;
and Nkinzo had been receiving death threats by telephone since May 29.
CPJ sources say the rebels began hunting for the three station directors
shortly after taking the town on the morning of June 2.
All three stations stopped broadcasting to protect their staff. Rebel
forces broke windows and stole equipment from Radio Maria. Also on Wednesday,
rebels seized communications equipment from a guard at Radio Maendeleo
and forced their way into the studio, but no one was there.
Nkinzo and Mushizi took refuge at the U.N. compound in Bukavu on June
3.
Radio Okapi, a joint project of the U.N. mission in DRC and the Switzerland-based
Hirondelle Foundation, is the only radio station in Bukavu whose broadcasts
continued uninterrupted. Radio Okapi broadcasts from the U.N. compound.
Two groups of pro-Rwanda rebels in the east joined forces to take Bukavu
on June 2 because of tensions over a new integrated national army a new
governor appointed in Bukavu by the transitional government in Kinshasa,
according to international news sources. Anti-U.N. protests erupted yesterday
in Kinshasa and other cities, with demonstrators blaming U.N. peacekeepers
in Bukavu for failing to defend the city.
On June 2, Maheshe, a journalist with Radio Okapi, received phone calls
from presumably anti-rebel individuals who threatened to "deal" with him
because they said he worked for the United Nations, which the callers
said had "sold Bukavu out."
Sources in Bukavu told CPJ that on Thursday afternoon, rebels forced journalists
from the local studio of the national radio station RTNC back on air and
were dictating the content of broadcasts.
JUNE 7, 2004
Posted: August 10, 2004
Gustave Kalenga Kabanda, La Flamme du Congo
IMPRISONED
Police arrested Kalenga, editor and director of the independent weekly
La Flamme du Congo, at his home in the capital, Kinshasa, according
to JED. He was jailed on charges of filming illegally at the Gemena residence
of Jean-Pierre Bemba, one of DRC's four vice presidents, after Bemba accused
him of spying and trespassing. Gemena is in Equateur Province, in northern
DRC, which is a stronghold of Bemba's former rebel movement, the MLC.
Kalenga led a team of seven Congolese journalists who visited Gemena from
May 29 to June 5. They were accompanying Senator Jeannot Bemba Saolona,
the vice president's father, who was returning to his birthplace for the
first time in five years. The journalists filmed plantations and property
belonging to the Bemba family, including a luxurious new residence being
built by the vice president.
Kalenga had already been arrested on June 1 and jailed for 5 days in Gemena
before being granted a provisional release and permission to return to
Kinshasa, according to JED. He was provisionally released from Kinshasa
Central Prison on the evening of June 26, after paying US$53 in bail.
JUNE 19, 2004
Updated: July 19, 2004
Nicaise Kibel-Bel-Oka, Les Coulisses
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Kibel-Bel-Oka, publisher and editor of the private weekly Les Coulisses
in the northeastern town of Beni, was convicted of defamation and jailed.
According to the local press freedom group Journaliste En Danger (JED),
the charges against Kibel-Bel-Oka stem from a December 2003 Les Coulisses
article that accused Jacques Kiangu, a local businessman, of failing to
pay taxes on goods he imported from Uganda.
On March 2, a court in Beni sentenced Kibel-Bel-Oka to five years in prison
and ordered him to pay US$2,000 in damages. The journalist was not present
at the opening of the trial because he was unaware of the trial date.
Shortly thereafter, a judge reduced the journalist's prison sentence to
six months and increased the fine to US$5,000.
Kibel-Bel-Oka's lawyers appealed the sentence and were able to get a new
trial, during which they provided evidence to substantiate the allegations
made in the Les Coulisses article.
On June 19, Kibel-Bel-Oka was again sentenced to six months in prison
and ordered to pay US$5,000 in damages. Intelligence agents arrested him
that same day.
On July 10, a higher court granted Kibel-Bel-Oka a provisional release
pending consideration of an appeal filed by his lawyers claiming a number
of irregularities, according to JED. The journalist, who paid US$200 in
bail, spent 21 days in detention. The first appeal hearing will be held
on August 6. Under the terms of his provisional release, Kibel-Bel-Oka
is not permitted to travel outside Beni.
JUNE 20, 2004
Posted: July 26, 2004
Modeste Shabani, Sauti ya Mkaaaji
ATTACKED
Shabani, director of the community radio station Sauti ya Mkaaji (Voice
of the Farmer) in Kasongo, eastern DRC, was severely beaten by armed men
and hospitalized in intensive care, according to the local press freedom
group Journaliste en Danger (JED). The attackers were led by an officer
of the former rebel movement RCD, Col. Bokeone Alumba Okoko, who accused
Shabani of "meddling too much in human rights issues." JED reported that
Sauti ya Mkaaji had broadcast reports denouncing human rights abuses by
Colonel Bokeone in Kasongo.
The armed men stormed Sauti ya Mkaaji's studio and threatened its staff
before attacking Shabani. JED reported that when delegates visited Shabani
in a Goma medical center on June 29, he was suffering from fractured hips,
broken ribs, and acute pain at the base of his neck. He had been transferred
from a medical center in Kasongo, Maniema Province, to the larger town
of Goma because of the severity of his injuries.
The day of the attack, a commission of inquiry launched by Maniema Provincial
Governor Koloso Sumahili suspended Colonel Bokeone. Human rights activists
are calling for the colonel to be prosecuted.
JULY 5, 2004
Posted: July 21, 2004
César Balume Wetemwami, freelance
IMPRISONED
Wetemwami, president of the association of photographers of DRC's
North-Kivu Province, was arrested by Rwandan officials when he crossed
the border from Goma (DRC) into Gisenyi (Rwanda). The officials accused
him of spying, according to Congolese press freedom group Journaliste
en Danger (JED).
Wetemwami, who is based in Goma, had gone to Gisenyi on a photo assignment
for various Congolese newspapers. After his arrest, he was detained in
a military prison in Gisenyi. During questioning, he was accused of spying
because his cell phone contained contact numbers for DRC President Laurent
Kabila and Information Minister Vital Kamerhe, Balume later told JED.
On July 16, after JED and international news media reported his arrest,
the Rwandan military handed Balume over to Congolese authorities in Goma.
He was released on July 18.
JULY 15, 2004
Posted: July 26, 2004
Canal Kin Télévision (CK TV)
ATTACKED
About a dozen armed police stormed CK TV's headquarters in the capital,
Kinshasa, just after 12 p.m. The officers were accompanied by TV evangelist
Pastor Denis Lessie, who was demanding that he be allowed to respond to
another pastor, Théodore Ngoy, who was on air and had accused him
of "swindling and influence peddling," according to the local press freedom
group Journaliste en Danger (JED).
Lessie went to the studio where the program was airing and tried to force
his way in, but CK TV personnel stopped him. This led to an altercation
between the CK TV personnel and the police, who were "guarding" Lessie.
More police were called in to help "protect" Lessie, and CK TV's programs
were disrupted for a few moments, according to JED. Alerted to what was
happening, JED President D. M'baya Tshimanga went to CK TV's studios and
met with Lessie, who apologized for his behavior.
JULY 16, 2004
Posted: August 10, 2004
Déo Namujimbo, Syfia
THREATENED
Soldiers close to rebel army commander Laurent Nkunda began hunting for
Namujimbo, the Goma (North-Kivu, Province, eastern DRC) correspondent
for the France-based news agency Syfia, after an article he wrote denouncing
a "reign of terror" by Nkunda's men appeared on Syfia's Web site on July
15. Namujimbo's neighbors warned him not to return to his home, according
to CPJ sources.
Press freedom organization Journaliste en Danger (JED) quoted Namujimbo's
neighbors as saying that on the night of July 17, "the same soldiers spread
all over the area [near Namujimbo's home] until 3 a.m., asking questions
about what time the journalist would return." On July 18, Namujimbo was
forced to flee with his family to Bukavu, in South-Kivu Province.
Namujimbo's article denounced massive human rights abuses allegedly committed
by Nkunda's men. According to JED, he wrote that "for the last month-and-a-half,
the population of Minova, not far from Goma, have been living in terror
because of harassment by soldiers of Nkunda encamped in the region. Racketeering
and rape are frequent. At night, everyone goes to hide in the hills."
The article was reprinted in newspapers in the capital, Kinshasa, including
the July 17 edition of daily Le Potentiel.
In June, renegade troops loyal to wartime rebel commanders Nkunda and
Col. Jules Mutebutsi took control of Bukavu, some 60 miles south of Goma,
for nine days, before troops loyal to DRC President Joseph Kabila
retook the town.
JULY 19, 2004
Posted: August 10, 2004
Lumbana Kapassa, RadioTélévision Kin Malebo (RTKM)
HARASSED, THREATENED
Kapassa, director-general of the private station RTKM, was summoned to
the premises of the government security services (Agence nationale des
renseignements, ANR) in the capital, Kinshasa, and questioned for three
hours about an RTKM broadcast that had shown Honoré Ngbanda Nzambo ko
Atumba, former defense minister and special security adviser to the late
dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, addressing officers of Mobutu's former army
in exile.
In his speech, shown in a recorded broadcast from Brussels, Ngbanda criticized
the current regime in Kinshasa but urged the exiled soldiers to return
to DRC and join a new integrated army being created under a peace agreement,
according to local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED).
Authorities threatened Kapassa during his interrogation and confiscated
tapes of the broadcast. The journalist was told that RTKM should never
again broadcast anything featuring Ngbanda, according to JED.
AUGUST 3, 2004
Posted: August 27,2004
José Wakadila, La Référence Plus
THREATENED, LEGAL ACTION
La Référence Plus
LEGAL ACTION
Wakadila, a journalist with the Kinshasa daily newspaper La Référence
Plus, was summoned to appear in court in the capital, Kinshasa, to
answer charges of criminal defamation filed by the DRC's national oil
refinery, SOCIR, according to local press freedom organization Journaliste
en Danger (JED). SOCIR has also filed a civil complaint against La
Référence Plus.
Wakadila did not appear in court hearings on August 3 and August 18, but
his lawyers represented him, according to CPJ sources and local press
reports. The journalist has gone into hiding for fear of arrest. Lawyers
for Wakadila and La Référence Plus have lodged an
appeal with a higher court on procedural grounds.
The defamation charges stem from a July 17 article in La Référence
Plus that accused certain directors of the company of corruption and
of conspiring with some multinationals to reduce SOCIR's crude oil refining
capabilities, according to JED.
JED reported that Wakadila received anonymous phone calls warning him
of arrest and also saying, "You chose the wrong target because you attacked
the younger brother of Vice President Yerodia." SOCIR Executive Director
Mvwemba Ntala Félix is the brother of Abdoulaye Yerodia, one of
DRC's four vice presidents.
SOCIR, a mixed-capital, Italo-Congolese joint venture based at Kinlao,
on the coast near Muanda, opened in 1963 to refine crude oil. However,
it cannot process the DRC's heavy crude, and in recent years it has served
mainly as a storage facility for imported petroleum products.
AUGUST 4, 2004
Updated: November 9, 2004
Radio Hosanna
CENSORED
Roger Nsenda, Radio Hosanna
Clement Kabwe, Radio Hosanna
Costa Kazadi, Radio Hosanna
Didier Lofoli, Radio Hosanna
CENSORED, IMPRISONED
National intelligence agents stormed evangelical station Radio Hosanna,
in the southern city of Lubumbashi, closing it and arresting seven employees
after the station broadcast a sermon that criticized the government.
Radio Hosanna broadcasts religious and news programs in local languages,
including French and Swahili.
The raid came one day after the arrest of Albert Lukusa, pastor of the
Nouvelle Cité de David (New City of David) church, which owns the
station. The national intelligence agency (ANR) accused Lukusa of insulting
the head of state and of "inciting people to revolt against national authorities,"
CPJ sources said.
The accusation stems from a July 31 broadcast of a sermon by Lukusa in
which he discussed the state of the country on the anniversary of its
independence, the sources said. During his sermon, Lukusa criticized the
government and said he would continue to do so, as he had under the rule
of former dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. According to the local press freedom
organization Journaliste en Danger (JED), Lukusa alleged that the government
was corrupt and had mismanaged the country's economy.
The pastor also pointed to the presence of what he termed "foreigners"
in the transitional government headed by President Joseph Kabila, initiated
after a 2002 power-sharing deal that ended a devastating four-year civil
war. Lukusa said the country was "run by Rwandans and Senegalese," and
that authorities were "incapable of responding to the basic needs of the
population," according to JED.
On August 4, journalists at the station announced Lukusa's detention on-air,
rebroadcast the sermon, and invited listeners to call in to express their
opinions, according to local sources. During the call-in program, ANR
agents and police stormed the station, confiscated equipment, including
the transmitter, and arrested seven station employees. These included
four journalists: Nsenda, Kabwe, Kazadi, and Lofoli, according to a source
at the station. Two technicians, Maturin Tshisimpa and Mimi Kajinga, were
also arrested, along with security guard Emmanuel Lukumu.
On August 7, the seven radio employees were released without charge. According
to JED, a court in Lubumbashi acquitted Lukusa on October 18, and he was
released that day. On October 28, the ANR returned the radio station's equipment, and Hosanna began broadcasting again two days later, according to a source at the station.
AUGUST 11, 2004
Posted: August 20, 2004
Théobald Balura, Radiotélévision Nationale Congolaise
(RTNC)
HARASSED
Balura, a cameraman for the national broadcaster in the eastern town of
Goma, was arrested by troops loyal to dissident army commander Laurent
Nkunda in Minova, about 32 miles (52 kilometers) from Goma, according
to the local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED). Nkunda's
forces had set up base in Minova after withdrawing from Bukavu, which
they captured for a week in early June.
Balura had gone to Minova to cover a ceremony marking the hand over to
a new local administrator, according to JED. But Nkunda's men prevented
the ceremony from taking place, arresting Balura at the same time and
seizing his camera.
Balura was released on August 13. He told JED his captors had said he
was filming a banned ceremony. Balura said he had been freed on Nkunda's
orders. He said Nkunda had also ordered the detention of the commander
behind the arrest, and the return of the journalist's camera.
AUGUST 19, 2004
Posted: August 25, 2004
Simplice Kalunga wa Kalunga, Channel Media Broadcasting (CMB)
HARASSED, THREATENED
Kalunga, news director of the private television station Channel Media
Broadcasting (CMB) and anchor of CMB's "Nouvelle Donne" (New Deal)
program, was summoned to the state prosecutor's office in Kinshasa and
questioned for several hours about a televised interview on a nationality
law before parliament, according to Kalunga and local press freedom groups.
The interview, broadcast on August 9, was with local lawyer and clergyman
Théodore Ngoy, who has since been arrested. The prosecutor seized
a videocassette of the program, according to the press freedom group Journaliste
en Danger (JED).
The broadcast took a critical look at the nationality measure drafted
by Justice Minister Kisimba Ngoy. In the interview, Théodore Ngoy
alleged corruption in the Justice Ministry and suggested the minister
step down, according to CPJ sources.
Kalunga said he received threatening phone calls before and after his
questioning, and said he fears for his safety. He said when he called
Kisimba Ngoy, the minister accused him of corruption.
JED said Théodore Ngoy was arrested on August 14 and imprisoned
in Kinshasa's central jail, accused of "offense to the authorities and
insults to the judiciary."
Kalunga has been questioned before about his program. Last October, police
detained Kalunga and questioned him for several hours about a broadcast
in which a guest criticized the country's justice system. He was released
the same day.
SEPTEMBER 13, 2004
Posted: September 17, 2004
Freddy Monsa Iyaka Duku, Le Potentiel
HARASSED
Monsa, publication director of the widely respected independent daily
Le Potentiel, was arrested and detained when he responded to a
prosecutor's summons in the capital, Kinshasa. After appearing before
a judge, the journalist was held overnight in a cell at the Public Prosecutor's
Department before being released the following afternoon.
According to local sources, the summons followed a complaint lodged by
Arthur Z'Ahidi Ngoma, one of four vice presidents in DRC's national transitional
government. The complaint stemmed from an August 23 article published
in Le Potentiel about a land ownership dispute between Ngoma and
the private textile company Utexafrica. The newspaper printed a press
release from Ngoma claiming that the disputed plot of land legally belongs
to the vice president, as well as a letter from Texaf, Utexafrica's Belgium-based
parent company, accusing Ngoma of using his political power to occupy
the land illegally.
Le Potentiel also published a short commentary on the dispute,
titled "Land ownership scandal: Z'Ahidi Ngoma wants to help himself,"
stating that the vice president "could be accused of misappropriation
and abuse of power" if Texaf's allegations prove true.
Several days after the article ran, Le Potentiel received and published
a letter of response from Ngoma, which included copies of official documents
that he claimed support his ownership claim over the land.
While in detention, Monsa was accused of defaming the vice president,
an offense that could carry a prison sentence if he is convicted, local
sources say. Upon his release after paying bail of about US$100,
Monsa was told to report to the prosecutor twice a week. Le Potentiel
hired a lawyer who has petitioned for the case against Monsa to be
dropped, according to a source at the newspaper.
The Kinshasa-based press freedom organization Journaliste en Danger protested
Monsa's detention, noting that Le Potentiel "has shown complete
professionalism in this case."
DECEMBER 18, 2004
Posted: February 2, 2005
Feu d'Or Bonsange Ifonge, Tapis Rouge
IMPRISONED
Bonsange, the director of Tapis Rouge, a news periodical in the
capital, Kinshasa, was arrested and detained in connection with defamation
allegations. He was first held in a lockup of the judicial police, before
being transferred to Kinshasa central prison, according to local press
freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED).
Prosecutors questioned Bonsange about an article that appeared in Tapis
Rouge (Red Carpet) on December 16. The article accused national tax
office directors of corruption, according to JED. He was also questioned
about the identity of the author. The article was signed "Prof. Thony
Héritier," which Bonsange says is not a pseudonym.
JED said one director, Bulambo Kilosho, filed a complaint against Bonsange
for defamation. On December 24, Bonsange was granted a provisional release
after paying bail equivalent to US$340, according to JED.
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