New York, June 30, 2003Japanese photographer Takagi Tadatomo
was released and deported from Indonesia's war-torn Aceh Province on Sunday,
June 29, after being held for two days. The 25-year-old photographer left
Medan, the capital of neighboring North Sumatra Province, on a morning
flight to Singapore.
Indonesian military authorities in northern Aceh detained Tadatomo last
Thursday, June 26, for taking photographs without proper accreditation
of refugees fleeing fighting between rebels and government forceswho
launched a major military offensive against the rebels in the region in
mid-Mayand for traveling to the area on a tourist visa.
According to news reports, Tadatomo was held in police custody for two
nights before immigration officials transferred him to Medan on Saturday,
June 28.
American free-lance reporter William Nessen, who surrendered to Indonesian
military authorities on Tuesday, June 24, after spending several weeks
with separatist rebels of the Free Aceh Movement (known by its Indonesian
acronym as GAM), remains in custody on charges of violating the country's
immigration law. [See CPJ's June 25
alert]
On June 26, Aceh's martial authority announced harsh new restrictions
on journalists covering military operations there. On June 27, CPJ protested
these restrictions in
a letter to Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri.

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