New York, December 9, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the beating and intimidation of Mohammad Sadiq al-Odaini, head
of a Yemeni independent press freedom group. Al-Odaini, secretary-general
of the Center for Training and Protecting Journalist Freedom, told CPJ
that earlier this week he was threatened at gunpoint by a man he recognized
as a member of the security forces. A few days later the same man assaulted
him along with two other attackers.
Al-Odaini said he believed he was targeted because of his organization's
annual report published last month that accused the authorities of failing
to investigate attacks on the press.
On December 5, a man who al-Odaini identified as security officer Asaad
Ali Hezam al-Aayawi, pointed a pistol at al-Odaini's head and accused
him of being a traitor, the journalist said. The officer, who showed al-Odaini
his badge, is a well-known figure in the area, the journalist said. On
December 8, the same man along with two masked men dragged al-Odaini from
his house in the capital Sana'a around 9:30 p.m. and beat him. They tried
to enter the house but left after neighbors intervened. The attackers
returned later and stayed outside his home until 2 a.m. Al-Odaini called
the police but they did not arrive until after daybreak.
"We are outraged by the attacks on Mohammad Sadiq al-Odaini," said CPJ
Executive Director Ann Cooper. "The failure of the Yemeni authorities
to identify and bring to justice those behind such assaults and intimidation
suggests official tolerance for these violent and illegal acts. The government's
inaction is deeply alarming."
After the attacks al-Odaini filed a complaint with both the local police
and security authorities but they have failed to investigate. Al-Odaini
said the lack of concern for the first attack encouraged the second, and
his family feared more attacks.
In a sharp deterioration of press freedom in recent months, government
officials and suspected state agents have targeted several Yemeni journalists
with threats, brutal assaults, abductions, and criminal lawsuits. No has
been held accountable for these acts.

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