New York, September 25,
2003The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply troubled
that Jordanian authorities banned the September 23 issue of the private
weekly Al-Wihda.
According Mowaffaq Mahadeen, a managing editor at Al-Wihda, and independent
sources in the capital, Amman, the general prosecutor of the State Security
Court ordered the ban.
Mahadeen told CPJ that the issue was banned prior to being printed
and distributed. Like many other papers in Jordan, Al-Wihda is printed
at the offices of larger publications that own the printers. Mahadeen
said that the editor of the paper received a call from the prosecutor
general demanding that certain articles be removed before the paper
could appear on newsstands. When Al-Wihda editors refused, the issue
was banned.
Sources in Amman told CPJ that while Jordan’s Press Law does
not technically allow prior censorship, it is common for some employees,
who work for printers, to “tip off” authorities about potentially
sensitive articles in private newspapers.
Mahadeen told CPJ that he believes that the offending article in the
banned issue was about the practice of torture in Jordan.
“Prior censorship—whether official or unofficial—has
a chilling effect on press freedom,” said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper. “We urge Jordanian authorities to cease this practice
and to remove the ban on Al-Wihda.”

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