New York, July 19, 2004Farouk Chothia
and Ange Ngu Thomas, two BBC journalists who were detained last week by
Cameroonian soldiers in the disputed Bakassi peninsula and accused of
spying, were released without charge on Friday, July 16, according to
the BBC and international news reports. They are expected to arrive in
the capital, Yaoundé, today.
Chothia, a producer and South African national based in London, and Thomas,
a reporter based in the southwestern Cameroonian city of Douala, were
arrested by Cameroonian soldiers on Sunday, July 11. They had traveled
to Bakassi, an oil-rich territory claimed by both Cameroon and Nigeria,
to report on the handover of the area to Cameroon.
The journalists were brought to Limbe, a coastal town in southwest Cameroon,
where they were detained in a local hotel and questioned about their activities.
CPJ sources say that the journalists were threatened during their interrogation
and deprived of food for brief periods as leverage. During their detention,
the journalists signed statements saying they were not spies.
Chothia and Thomas had obtained signed authorization from Cameroonian
authorities to travel to Bakassi. Soldiers confiscated their authorization,
equipment, and identity papers during the arrest. The equipment and identity
papers were returned to the journalists after their release, according
to a CPJ source.
A 2002 ruling by the International Court of Justice in the Hague awarded
Bakassi to Cameroon, and Nigerian troops are due to pull out by September
15. However, Nigerian communities on the peninsula are unhappy with the
ruling, and the handover remains a sensitive topic in both countries.
For more information about Farouk Chothia and Ange Ngu Thomas' arrest,
see CPJ's July 14 alert.

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