New York, August 8, 2005—Michaël Didama, director of the private
weekly Le Temps, was convicted on charges of defamation and incitement
to hatred today and sentenced to six months in jail in connection with
articles describing rebel groups in eastern Chad, according to local sources.
The charges stemmed from May articles in Le Temps, one of which
reported a resurgence of rebel movements in areas bordering the troubled
Sudanese province of Darfur. The other described an alleged massacre of
civilians in the same region, accompanied by a photograph of people said
to be victims. According to local sources, the photograph was taken from
the news Web site Alwihda, which is linked to the armed opposition
Renewed Chadian National Front. Le Temps has stood by its stories.
The High Council of Communication, a local media regulatory body, had
previously studied the articles in response to complaints from government
officials, but decided in early June that the newspaper was not guilty
of incitement, CPJ sources said. Didama was arrested and criminally charged
on July 22.
Didama is the third Chadian journalist to be jailed for his work this
year. Ngaradoumbé Samory, editor-in-chief of the private weekly
L'Observateur, and Garondé Djarma, a freelance writer, were
sentenced to prison terms in July. To read more about their cases, see
CPJ's July 18 alert.
"We're alarmed by authorities' use of vaguely worded legislation to imprison
journalists," said Ann Cooper, executive director of the Committee to
Protect Journalists. "We call on authorities to release Michaël Didama
and stop this crackdown immediately."

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