New York, August 15, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
denounces the sedition charge brought today against radio talk show
host Andrew Mwenda for remarks last week on the independent KFM radio
station. The station also remained off the air today, four days after
the government forced its closing in retaliation for the show, which focused
on the July helicopter crash that killed southern Sudanese leader John
Garang.
Mwenda, a print and radio journalist for the independent Monitor Publications,
pleaded not guilty and was released on bail. The charge carries a prison
sentence of up to five years, according to Monitor Publications lawyer
James Nangwala. Mwenda was arrested on Friday and held for three days.
Mwenda was accused of seeking to "bring into hatred or contempt or to
excite disaffection" against President Yoweri Museveni, according to The
Associated Press. The charge stemmed from his broadcast remarks last Wednesday
suggesting that government incompetence led to the July 30 crash of the
Ugandan presidential helicopter.
Talks continued between the Ugandan authorities and representatives of
Monitor Publications, as well as its parent company, Nation Media Group
of Kenya, to allow KFM to reopen, according to CPJ sources. Uganda's Broadcasting
Council ordered the station closed the day after Mwenda's live talk show.
Museveni has threatened to shut any news outlet that "plays around with
regional security."
"The Ugandan government's targeting of Andrew Mwenda, together with official
threats against the independent press, have cast a deep chill over Uganda's
independent media," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "The government
should not be using criminal charges to punish a reporter for his work.
We call on the government to allow KFM to reopen and to drop these charges
against our colleague immediately."
Read CPJ's news alert on Mwenda's arrest.

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