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New York, April 5, 2000 --- On April 3, a criminal court in
the western Cameroonian town of Bafoussam convicted Michel Eclador
Pekoua on one count of defamation and sentenced him to six months
in prison without parole, sources in Cameroon told CPJ. Pekona is
the publisher of the private weekly Ouest Echos.
The verdict came six months after a state-owned oil company, Société
Nationale des Hydrocarbures (SNH), accused Pekoua of defaming two
company officials in an August 1999 Ouest Echos editorial.
Quoting a leaked SNH internal document, Pekoua alleged that SNH executive
director Adolphe Moduki had embezzled large sums out of the company's
budget, and had spent much of the stolen money on gifts for his lover,
Tenda Ekoka, an executive secretary at SNH.
Moduki did not personally file suit against Pekoua (according to CPJ's
sources, he was reluctant to do so for fear that an investigation
would reveal that he had in fact embezzled money). With support from
SHN, Ekoka filed suit against the journalist, arguing that she had
been defamed when he described the details of her alleged affair.
After the verdict, police handcuffed Pekoua and drove him to a Bafoussam
penitentiary where he remains in detention, CPJ's sources say.
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