New York, November 29, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
welcomed an interim ruling by Nepal's Supreme Court today preventing
the government from suspending Radio Sagarmatha. Police raided the independent
Kathmandu-based station on Sunday to stop it from broadcasting a BBC interview
with Maoist rebel leader Prachanda.
The Court summoned government officials to a hearing on December 7. Radio
Sagarmatha (Mount Everest Radio), resumed broadcasting immediately after
the interim order. The raid on the station is part of an ongoing crackdown
on the media by the government of King Gyanendra who seized absolute power
in February.
"While we welcome today's ruling we are outraged at the government's attempts
to silence local and foreign news reports," said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper. "Until the King repeals his repressive media ordinance, radio
journalists in particular will continue to work under the constant threat
of government reprisal."
The Supreme Court has played a key role in legal battles over a ban on
FM news broadcasts instituted in an October ordinance. Earlier this month,
the court refused to stay the government closure of Kantipur FM on October
21. Kantipur was the first target of the new media law.
During the raid on Sunday, police accused Radio Sagarmatha of "helping
terrorists and terrorism." They confiscated equipment used to relay BBC
broadcasts and arrested five staff members who were released on Monday.
After today's ruling, the Minister of Information and Communications ordered
the radio station to refrain from broadcasting BBC Nepali programs and
others "banned by the law," according to Nepalnews.com. It was unclear
whether the government had returned the equipment that police confiscated.
State-owned Radio Nepal, which rebroadcasts the BBC English-language World
Service on FM 103 in Kathmandu, also halted BBC transmissions on Sunday.
Radio Nepal officials called the disruption a result of "technical problems"
and broadcasts resumed on Monday, according to news reports. Access to
the BBC News Web site was temporarily blocked, and the BBC Nepali service
Web site was still blocked today, the BBC said.
The interview with Prachanda was his first since the Maoists began their
fight to overthrow the monarchy in 1996. In the interview, the rebel leader
confirmed that Maoists were willing to consider a softened stance toward
the monarchy provided that elections for a constituent assembly were held.
Several local radio stations have been permitted to carry BBC Nepali service
reports despite a government ban on FM radio stations from broadcasting
news.
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