New York, February 17, 2005Guinean security
forces arrested the editor of one of the nation's leading private weeklies
at his home in the capital, Conakry, on Wednesday night. Authorities did
not disclose charges against Mohamed Lamine Diallo, known by his pen name
Benn Pépito, but local journalists believe the arrest could be
linked to his journalism.
Security forces also searched Pépito's home, but nothing was confiscated,
local sources told the Committee to Protect Journalists. The journalist
was being held at the headquarters of Conakry's security services, local
media groups said in a joint statement today.
"We call on Guinean authorities to explain why they are holding Benn Pépito
and to make public any charges against him," CPJ Executive Director Ann
Cooper said today.
The February 16 edition of Pépito's newspaper, the private weekly
La Lance, carried an editorial titled, "The situation in Lomé
seen from Conakry," which compared the political situation in Guinea,
where President Lansana Conté has ruled since 1984, to that of
Togo, where the army moved to install long-time ruler Gnassingbé
Eyadema's son as president following Eyadema's death on February 5.
Both Eyadema and Conté "modified the law to prolong their grip
on power," the editorial said, referring to steps by Conté's government
to extend presidential term limits. "Is there a risk that the scenario
in Lomé could be replicated in Conakry?" The article also called
for "a greater opening of the political system toward the true exercise
of democracy" as the best guarantee of peaceful political transition in
"our young states."
Guinean security forces have arrested and questioned dozens of people
following an alleged January 19 assassination attempt on Conté,
raising fears of a crackdown on the opposition.
Authorities frequently censor and harass critical publications. Most recently,
the government's National Communications Council (CNC) suspended the private
newspaper Le Quotidien in November 2004 and accused it of undermining
"peace, tranquility, and democracy." According to local sources, the suspension
stemmed from an article in Le Quotidien criticizing the political
and economic situation in Guinea.

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