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New York, October 9, 2001—The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) welcomes the release of British journalist Yvonne Ridley, a reporter
for London's Sunday Express who was imprisoned by Afghanistan's
ruling Taliban militia for 10 days after entering the country without
a visa.
Late yesterday evening, October 8, Taliban escorts drove Ridley to the
Pakistani border crossing at Torkham, near Peshawar, and handed her
over to Pakistani officials. In an account of her ordeal published today
in the daily Express, Ridley reported that the Taliban's supreme
leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, signed her release order under pressure
from the Pakistani government.
"We are extremely pleased that our colleague Yvonne Ridley has been
freed," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "CPJ calls on the Taliban
to allow foreign journalists access to Afghanistan so that they can
cover events in the country."
Background
Taliban soldiers arrested Ridley, along with two Afghan guides,
on September 28 in the village of Dour Baba, just 9 miles (15 kilometers)
from the Pakistani border. The fate of the guides remains unknown.
Senior Taliban officials had told reporters that Ridley was under investigation
for spying and would have to stand trial for entering the country illegally.
At the time of her arrest, Ridley was disguised underneath an all-encompassing
burqa gown and was not carrying a passport or other travel documents.
In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on the United States, the
Taliban have banned foreign journalists from entering Afghanistan and
stopped granting visas to foreigners.
Authorities initially detained Ridley in Jalalabad and then moved her
to a prison in Kabul, where she was jailed along with six of eight foreign
aid workers who are currently on trial for preaching Christianity, a
violation of Taliban law.
In her Express article, Ridley wrote that she began a hunger
strike the day of her arrest, when she was denied access to a telephone.
Ridley reported that from her prison cell in Kabul, she could clearly
see bombs dropping on the evening of October 7, the first night of U.S.-led
air strikes against Afghanistan.
Commenting on her decision to go to Afghanistan, Ridley wrote, "It was
not a silly stunt, I was trying to find out what Afghans thought about
the situation."
After her release, Ridley was taken first to Peshawar and then to Islamabad,
where she was in the care of the British High Commission. She was due
to leave Islamabad Tuesday night local time for London, according to
Martin Townsend, editor of the Sunday Express.
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