New York, December 15, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is deeply concerned that the murderers of leading Gambian editor and
press freedom activist Deyda Hydara have not been brought to justice a
year after his death. As local and international press freedom groups
mark the anniversary on Friday, CPJ renews its call to the Gambian government
to take urgent steps to conduct a thorough and independent probe and end
the culture of impunity.
"The government's own investigation has led to no arrests and produced
nothing of substance. Instead, investigators waged an outrageous smear
campaign against the victim himself," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper
said. "With investigators having lost their credibility, President Yahya
Jammeh and his government should pay heed to the many international calls
to commission an independent probe."
Hydara, managing editor and co-owner of the independent newspaper The
Point, as well as a correspondent for Agence France-Presse
and Reporters Without Borders, was shot in the head by unidentified assailants
while he drove home from his office in the capital, Banjul, late on December
16, 2004. Two other staff members of The Point were in the car
with Hydara and were wounded in the attack.
The National Intelligence Agency (NIA) took over the investigation from
police in February. In June, the NIA issued a report that failed to detail
any forensic evidence and was widely seen as an attempt to smear Hydara's
reputation. Investigators said that Hydara had "recklessly provoked" numerous
people, focusing on his personal life without any evidence it was related
to the crime.
Since the June report was issued, authorities have been silent on the
probe. See
CPJ's June 16 alert:
Hydara's murder followed a series of unsolved arson attacks on independent
journalists and media outlets. It also coincided with the introduction
of repressive new media laws that Hydara, a frequent critic of Jammeh,
had opposed.
"Our hearts go out to the family and friends of Deyda Hydara at this difficult
time," Cooper said. "His many friends and colleagues will continue their
efforts to seek justice. Allowing the killers to go unpunished is an affront
to freedom and democracy in the entire region."

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