New York, July 3, 2003—Algerian authorities banned foreign media from
covering yesterday's release of two convicted leaders of the Islamic Salvation
Front (FIS), a group that was outlawed in 1992 when its party was poised
to win parliamentary elections. At least two French news crews were expelled
today for ignoring the ban.
According to CPJ sources in Algeria, government officials contacted foreign
news outlets in the capital, Algiers, and told them they were barred from
covering the release of FIS leaders Ali Belhadj and Abassi Madani, who
were sentenced to prison in 1992. Madani had been under house arrest since
1997, while Belhadj was held at a prison in Blida, about 25 miles (40
kilometers) south of Algiers.
On July 1, the Communications Ministry contacted the state-run French
television stations, France 2 and France 3, and the private French station
TF1—who were in Algiers to cover the return of Air France flights to Algeria—telling
the outlets that they were not allowed to cover Madani and Belhadj's release,
said a spokesperson for France 2.
The spokesperson said that the three stations managed to circumvent the
ban and fed a tape of Belhadj's prison release to their stations in Paris
from their hotel. After the footage aired on French television, police
went to the hotel and confiscated the journalists' equipment. The TF1
team left the country this morning before the official expulsion order
came, and Algerian authorities accompanied the France 2 and France 3 journalists
to the airport today.
Meanwhile, Agence France-Presse reported that the crew of another French
station and a Belgian station were also expelled. CPJ was unable to confirm
whether these stations were expelled.
"Preventing journalists from covering a newsworthy event is blatant censorship,"
said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "We call on Algerian authorities
to lift these restrictions against journalists and allow the press to
do their job freely."

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