New York, June 14, 2005—The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns
Sunday's decision by Sudanese justice officials to cancel the license
of Sudan's English-language daily, The Khartoum Monitor.
Alfred Taban, the paper's chairman, said he was notified in a letter from
the National Press Council, the government agency that regulates the press.
Taban told CPJ that a criminal court had suspended the newspaper's license
in July 2003 after it ran articles about slavery in Sudan, but an appeals
court later restored the license. Sudan's Supreme Court endorsed the appellate
ruling, and the paper had published normally since March 2004.
But Taban said he was surprised to learn that Sudan's chief justice appointed
a committee to re-examine the newspaper's license. Sunday's cancellation
notice said the committee decided that the original court ruling was proper;
it offered no explanation for the basis of the decision or the procedural
grounds that allowed such a committee to rule. Taban told CPJ that he
is not aware of any precedent that allows for such a committee to be formed
or to overturn a court decision.
The Monitor stopped publishing after receiving notice that its
license was revoked, he said. Taban said he plans to appeal directly to
the chief justice, and the newspaper will file an appeal with Sudan's
Constitutional Court, the highest court in the country.
Taban told CPJ that he is uncertain about the motive for the cancellation,
but noted that the newspaper published a piece last month about violence
at a displaced persons camp outside Khartoum. The story angered authorities
because it countered the official version of events, and police confiscated
the entire edition of the newspaper. Taban said police filed a complaint
against the newspaper after the incident, but he had received no court
summonses yet.
"We demand that the newspaper's license be restored and that its journalists
be allowed to work freely without further harassment from the authorities,"
CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said.
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