Kinshasa, June 3, 2004—Rebel forces that took control of
the town of Bukavu, in eastern DRC, on Wednesday have threatened and attacked
the town's three main community radio stations, forcing them off the air,
according to the local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger (JED)
and other local sources.
Joseph Nkinzo, director of the radio station Sauti ya Rehema (Voice of
Mercy), narrowly escaped an assassination attempt this morning, when rebels
came looking for him and murdered his younger brother. The rebels arrived
at the journalist's home, smashed windows, and demanded to know where
Nkinzo was. Believing that Nkinzo's brother was the journalist, the rebels
killed him and looted the house.
Ben Kabamba, director of Radio Maria; Kizito Mushizi, director of Radio
Maendeleo; and Nkinzo had been receiving death threats by telephone since
May 29. CPJ sources say the rebels began hunting for the three station
directors shortly after taking the town on Wednesday morning.
All three stations stopped broadcasting to protect
their staff. Rebel forces broke windows and stole equipment from Radio
Maria. Also on Wednesday, rebels seized communications equipment from
a guard at Radio Maendeleo and forced their way into the studio, but no
one was there.
Nkinzo and Mushizi took refuge at the U.N. compound in Bukavu today.
Radio Okapi, a joint project of the U.N. mission in DRC and the Switzerland-based
Hirondelle Foundation, is the only radio station in Bukavu whose broadcasts
continued uninterrupted. Radio Okapi broadcasts from the U.N. compound.
Two groups of pro-Rwanda rebels in the east joined forces to take Bukavu
on Wednesday because of tensions over a new integrated national army a
new governor appointed in Bukavu by the transitional government in Kinshasa,
according to international news sources. Anti-U.N. protests erupted yesterday
in Kinshasa and other cities, with demonstrators blaming U.N. peacekeepers
in Bukavu for failing to defend the city.
On Wednesday morning, Serge Maheshe, a journalist with Radio Okapi, received
phone calls from presumably anti-rebel individuals who threatened to "deal"
with him because they said he worked for the United Nations, which the
callers said had "sold Bukavu out."
Sources in Bukavu told CPJ that on Thursday afternoon, rebels forced journalists
from the local studio of the national radio station RTNC back on air and
were dictating the content of broadcasts.

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