New York, April 27, 2005 Sudanese security forces in Darfur,
Sudan, detained an American freelance photographer yesterday as he photographed
a refugee camp.
Hartford-based Brad Clift is under house arrest at a United States Agency
for International Development office building after being detained in
Nyala in the Darfur region of Sudan, the daily Hartford Courant
reported. He is unable to leave until a hearing by Sudanese officials
is convened.
Clift was taking photographs in an internally displaced persons camp when
he was picked up, according to Thom McGuire, the Courant's assistant
managing editor for photo and graphics. McGuire told CPJ that Clift, who
has not been charged, was supposed to appear before a judge today in Nyala
but that the hearing was postponed.
Clift called a colleague at the paper yesterday from a mobile phone and
said he was "accused unjustly for trying to take a picture of someone
suffering in a camp."
Clift works for the Hartford Courant but was in Sudan as a freelancer,
traveling with a relief group called Hartford Catholic Worker that was
distributing food at camps around Nyala.
"Sudanese authorities have not explained why they are holding a working
photographer against his will, but we believe Brad Clift is being detained
for his professional work," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper. "He
should be released immediately."
Since the conflict in Darfur broke out in early 2003, tens of thousands
of people from western Sudan have been killed by government-supported
militias, and up to two million displaced from their homes. Sudanese authorities
have tried to suppress reports of atrocities there by obstructing the
work of foreign journalists who cover the region, according to CPJ research.

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