New York, August 22, 2003Earlier this month, Gambian
police assaulted Buya Jammeh, a reporter for the English-language biweekly
The Independent, near the newspaper's offices in the capital, Banjul.
According to sources familiar with the incident, on August 9, two police
officers stationed a short distance from the newspaper stopped Jammeh
on his way to a radio station where he works part-time as a deejay. Alhaji
Yorro Jallow, The Independent's managing editor, told CPJ that
the officers regularly see staff members from The Independent,
and could identify Jammeh by sight as a reporter at the newspaper.
The officers asked to search Jammeh's bag, but refused to give a reason
for the search. After Jammeh resisted the officers' request, they overpowered
him, confiscating the journalist's notebook and several music CDs and
cassettes. The officers then beat Jammeh until his face was swollen, according
to the journalist's colleagues, who saw him after the attack.
While the policemen gave no indication of the reasons behind their actions,
local journalists told CPJ that Jammeh may have been singled out because
of his association with The Independent, which has recently run
a series of articles and editorials criticizing the government.
Jallow thinks it is also possible that Jammeh was targeted because of
a story he wrote about a government official who was convicted of theft
in June. While Jammeh was working on the story, soldiers entered the newspaper's
offices and warned the staff not to report on the conviction, said Jallow.
The editor refused, and Jammeh's story appeared, with his byline, on August
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