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August 10, 2000
Mr. Emil Tompapa
President, Conseil National de la Communication (CNC)
Place Boule-Binet, près RTG
Conakry, Guinea
VIA FAX: +224.41.47.97
Dear Mr. Tompapa:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) calls on Guinea's National
Communications Council (CNC) to immediately and unconditionally reinstate
the press credentials of the Conakry-based foreign correspondents Mouctar
Bah (Agence France-Press), Ben Daouda Sylla (Africa No. 1), and Amadou
Diallo (BBC).
On July 28, the CNC announced that the accreditation of Bah, Sylla, and
Diallo had been suspended for two months, beginning August 1. In its announcement,
the CNC accused the three journalists of pursuing a "hidden agenda" and
distributing "tendentious and malevolent information on Guinea's social
and political situation."
The CNC reportedly made this announcement on July 28, a week before the
resumption of the trial of opposition leader Alpha Condé on charges
of "endangering the state." Local and international media and human rights
groups have repeatedly denounced this trial on both procedural and substantive
legal grounds.
As an organization of journalists committed to promoting press freedom
worldwide, CPJ believes that the CNC ruling is part of a systematic campaign
to stifle critical voices in Guinea and, in particular, to block international
coverage of the Condé trial. This blatant act of censorship is
the most recent in a disturbing pattern of attacks on independent journalism
in Guinea.
On around June 25, according to CPJ's local sources, the State Prosecutor's
Office in Conakry issued an arrest warrant against journalist Alphadio
Modesto Ayibatin after he published a critical article about the Guinean
government's economic policies in the Canadian daily Le Droit.
Ayibatin, who wrote this article during a recent professional visit to
Canada, was served with a court summons for "discrediting and defaming
the government" upon his return to Guinea in late June. Fearing imprisonment,
the journalist fled the country.
On March 28, the CNC suspended the private weeklies L'Oeil and
Le Soleil for one month, from March 31 to April 30. This decision
followed complaints lodged by several private businessmen whose alleged
malfeasance had been reported in several issues of the two papers.
On April 7, Abou Sankara, the editor-in-chief of Le Soleil, was
arrested at his newspaper's offices in Conakry. Sankara is accused of
having launched the new newspaper Le Soleil Enchâiné during
the one-month suspension of Le Soleil, in violation of the
Press Code. The CNC seized all copies of Le Soleil Enchâiné's
first edition and banned it from future circulation.
While Guinea's 1991 press laws are among Africa's most repressive, the
CNC was ostensibly created to "protect the rights of citizens to access
information, prevent an abusive control of state media by the government,
and hamper manipulation of public opinion by means of the media," according
to Article 2 of its charter. We call on the CNC to fulfill its mandate
by ensuring that the arrest warrant against Alphadio Modesto Ayibatin
is withdrawn and that the press credentials of Mouctar Bah, Ben Daouda
Sylla, and Amadou Diallo are unconditionally restored.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director
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