New York, September 29, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
today condemned the jail sentence given to a magazine journalist who reported
on alleged corruption in the distribution of food aid during this year's
famine in Niger. On Tuesday, a court in the northern town of Agadez convicted
Abdoulaye Harouna, publication director of the monthly Echos Express,
of defaming the local governor, Yahaya Yendaka. The court sentenced him
to four months in jail and fined him 520,000 CFA francs (US$950).
Harouna told CPJ that Yendaka filed a defamation suit against him after
an article accused the governor of corruption in the distribution of aid
in the Agadez region. Harouna remained free because no arrest warrant
was immediately issued. He said he planned to appeal.
Harouna faces prosecution on another count of defaming Yendaka following
an August article in Echos Express, which described a campaign
of harassment and intimidation by local authorities against journalists
who report on sensitive topics, including food aid distribution. The case
has not yet been brought to trial.
A second Agadez-based journalist, Hamed Assaleh Raliou, faces at least
two charges of defaming Yendaka in June and July, according to local sources.
One charge stems from a report filed by Raliou for Radio France Internationale,
which alleged that the governor had distributed food aid to military and
administrative officials instead of the needy. The second charge stems
from a talk show Raliou hosted on the Agadez-based independent station
Sahara FM. In the show, local journalists, a union leader, and a teacher
criticized the governor for unfairly distributing aid.
"CPJ condemns the jail sentence given to Abdoulaye Harouna, and is alarmed
by the series of cases being brought against journalists in Agadez for
their reporting on the relief effort," said Ann Cooper, executive director
of CPJ. "Authorities in Niger must ensure that journalists are able to
report and comment on this and other issues of public concern without
fear of reprisal."

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