June 28, 2000
President Robert Gueï
La Primature
Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire
Via Fax: (225) 20 32 90 77
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is gravely disturbed by your
regime's plans to tighten state control over the press in Côte
d'Ivoire.
According to CPJ's sources in Abidjan, Information Minister Captain
Henri Cesar Sama announced on June 23 that the ruling National Public
Salvation Committee (CNSP) would soon release a list of measures designed
to block the publication of any information "likely to negatively affect
the credibility of journalists, national security and social peace."
Captain Sama, who replaced journalist Levy Niamkey as information minister
on May 19, called on journalists to refrain from becoming "the extended
arm of politicians with dubious goals." The minister added that he "would
not hesitate to make use of the law which provides a spate of punishments
for journalists who deliberately ... compromise national security."
Hours after the Information Ministry released Captain Sama's statement,
the state-operated Radiodiffusion Television Ivoirienne (RTI) network
pulled a TV commercial for the opposition Rally of Republicans (RDR)
party off the air on the grounds that it contained snatches of "misleading,
mystic and Nazi" music. Ivorian journalists contacted by CPJ, however,
said the commercial in question contained no music at all, but did show
RDR leader Allassane Ouattara addressing a crowd of supporters in a
stadium.
If the government carries out this ill-considered plan, censorship will
soon be institutionalized in the Côte d'Ivoire. Your Excellency
has announced plans to hold general elections in the fall of 2000. In
light of Captain Sama's statement, however, we are concerned that journalists
will be prevented from freely covering these elections, thus reducing
the chances that the Ivorian people will be able to make an informed
electoral choice.
When Your Excellency seized power last December, you vowed that
"press freedom will be total" in the Côte d'Ivoire. Today,
your government ranks among Africa's worst press freedom offenders.
In the past six months, 21 journalists have been beaten, harassed, or
illegally detained, according to CPJ's research. Soldiers under your
command have raided local newsrooms, and detained and tortured reporters
accused of bias against Your Excellency or other military and state
officials.
On April 9, in one of the most disturbing cases documented by
CPJ, two soldiers kidnapped reporter Jules Toualy of the private daily
Le Jeune Democrate and tortured him for several hours. The attack
resulted from an April 8 article in which Toualy alleged that six foreign
mercenaries had been arrested for helping to instigate a March 28 mutiny
at a military base in Daloa, 80 miles northwest of Abidjan, with the
goal of overthrowing Your Excellency's regime.
Most recently, on May 16, soldiers abducted two reporters and a female
photographer from the daily La Reference and drove them to the
junta's headquarters, where they were beaten and made to perform push-ups
for several hours. This treatment was apparently meted out in reprisal
for an article in the May 12 issue of La Reference that accused
Your Excellency's wife of using state funds to cover costs for her personal
trips.
In light of the information minister's June 23 statement, CPJ fears
that state-sponsored press-freedom violations are becoming the norm
in the Côte d'Ivoire, in clear disregard for Article 19 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which grants all people, including
journalists, the right to free expression. We therefore urge Your Excellency
to give public assurances that the measures announced by Captain Sama
will not be implemented, and that all journalists in Côte d'Ivoire
will be able to work freely without fear of reprisal.
We await your comments.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director