New York, July 15, 2003Three imprisoned Togolese journalists
announced yesterday morning that they would begin a 48-hour hunger strike
to protest their continued detention on charges of "publishing false information
and disturbing public order."
Dimas Dzikodo and Philip Evégnon, editor-in-chief and publication
director, respectively, of the private weekly L'Evenement, and
Jean de Dieu Kpakpabia, journalist at the private weekly Nouvel Echo,
have been in prison for a month.
Togolese sources said that the three journalists have been beaten during
their detention. On July 4, the Togolese public prosecutor visited the
journalists in prison and asked them to disclose the names of those who
had beaten them. The journalists refused, for fear of further reprisals.
Dzikodo was arrested at a cybercafé in the capital, Lomé,
on Saturday, June 14, while he was scanning photos of people whom police
and government supporters had allegedly manhandled during the June 1 presidential
elections. Kpakpabia was arrested at the same cybercafé later that
day and was accused by police of trying to send photos with similar content
to a Web site outside the country. Evégnon was arrested on June
15; police claim he had directed Dzikodo to scan the photos.

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