New York, June 17, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the harassment and brief detention of Bassma al-Jandaly, a reporter
with the Dubai-based, English-language daily Gulf News.
Immigration officers detained al-Jandaly at Dubai's international airport
as she prepared to board a flight for Athens, Greece, with other journalists
on Wednesday, the journalist told CPJ. Al-Jandaly said she was taken to
the airport's Criminal Investigation Department, where police said her
name had been placed on a travel ban list because she was wanted by Sharjah
police. Sharjah is Dubai's neighboring emirate.
Al-Jandaly told CPJ that her problems with authorities began after a February
25 article in which she reported that a Sharjah woman was injured by a
knife-wielding man who had apparently attacked other women. Al-Jandaly
said she began to receive harassing phone calls from Sharjah police, who
said she was wanted for questioning. Al-Jandaly said that Sharjah police
told her that her story had interfered with their investigation into the
attacks.
Eventually, police told Gulf News that an arrest warrant had been
issued for al-Jandaly and Duraid al-Baik, the newspaper's local news editor.
Al-Jandaly said that after receiving conflicting information from authorities
about whether the two were in fact being charged, the paper's editors
hired a lawyer to handle the case.
Al-Jandaly was released from airport custody after a few hours following
the personal intervention of Interior Minister Sheikh Saif Bin Zayed Al
Nahyan.
"We're relieved Bassma al-Jandaly was released, but we deplore the detention
of a journalist who was simply doing her job in reporting a matter of
public interest," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said.
.

|