May 3, 2000
His Excellency Laurent-Désiré Kabila
President of the Democratic Republic of Congo
Ngaliema, Kinshasa
Democratic Republic of Congo
VIA FAX: 011-234-88-02120 / 1-202-234-2609
Your Excellency:
On the occasion of World Press Freedom Day, the Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) is writing to remind you that the illegal detention
of Freddy Loseke Lisumbu la Yayenga, editor of the Kinshasa-based weekly
La Libre Afrique, is entering its fifth consecutive month.
As we stated in a letter sent to Your Excellency on March 13, in the
early hours of December 31, 1999, armed soldiers under the command of
an officer known as Chief Iduma arrested Loseke at his Kinshasa residence.
He was taken to the Kokolo military base, where prison guards tore off
his clothes. He was then flogged by General Hilaire Muland Kapend, chief
commander of the 7th Military Region, and left to spend New Year's Eve
in a dingy, windowless cell, according to CPJ's Congolese and international
sources.
The arrest apparently resulted from two articles by Loseke that appeared
in the December 29 and December 31 issues of La Libre Afrique.
Both pieces warned of an imminent army-sponsored plot to overthrow Your
Excellency. Sources in Kinshasa told CPJ that Loseke has been accused
of "betrayal of the state in times of war." If convicted, he faces the
death penalty. La Libre Afrique, meanwhile, ceased publication
upon Loseke's arrest.
Loseke escaped from detention on January 9, with the help of a high-ranking
officer at the Kokolo military base, CPJ's Congolese sources say. Police
then arrested twenty members of his family, including his wife and five
children, one of whom was a six-month-old baby. The next day, Loseke
walked into a Kinshasa police station and surrendered to obtain his
family's release. He was immediately driven back to the Kokolo military
base, where he was again flogged and placed in solitary confinement.
On January 11, Loseke appeared before the Court of Military Order (COM).
Despite the DRC's constitutional due process guarantees, he was denied
legal representation. During the hearing, he was forced to reveal confidential
sources. He identified General Kapend as the chief conspirator, outlined
the coup conspiracy, and named the plotters' meeting spot. As a result
of Loseke's forced testimony, police arrested several suspects, including
General Kapend (who was later released, according to international news
reports).
Loseke himself remains in police custody at Kinshasa Penitentiary and
Re-education Center (CPRK), where he was transferred on February 25.
In a series of letters sent from prison to local human rights groups,
Loseke has expressed fear for his life. In late February, members of
the Congolese press freedom group Journalistes En Danger (JED), who
visited Loseke in his prison cell at the 7th Military Region, reported
that he bore marks of physical abuse. JED also reported that Loseke
was not being properly fed because visits from his wife and family were
strictly forbidden.
On April 14, a physically exhausted Loseke once again appeared before
the Court of Military Order, this time with legal representation. In
their closing argument, Loseke's lawyers pleaded for his temporary release
from detention for health reasons (Loseke suffers from kidney failure,
concurring sources in Kinshasa reported). The motion, however, was quickly
dismissed by the presiding military judge. No further developments have
been reported to CPJ since that time.
Loseke's prolonged detention, and the murkiness of the legal procedure
against him, are a blatant violation of his internationally-recognized
rights as a journalist, and of DRC's constitutional due process guarantees.
CPJ believes that Loseke did nothing other than seek, receive and circulate
information, a right affirmed for all people in Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights.
We respectfully remind Your Excellency that you promised to respect
press freedom when you spoke at the United Nations headquarters in New
York in January. May 3 is World Press Freedom Day, an excellent opportunity
for Your Excellency to demonstrate your commitment to your stated principles
by ensuring that Freddy Loseke Lisumbu La Yayenga is immediately and
unconditionally released.
We await your comments on this urgent matter.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director