"This unprecedented
suspension of the private press is intended to silence any potential critics of
the election process,” said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator
Early in September, Ali Bongo was elected president of the oil-rich country in an election to replace his father Omar Bongo, who had died in June after ruling the country for 41 years. All the suspended publications had written articles critical of what may have been a flawed election process, local journalists told CPJ.
The papers received immediate suspension sentences. Nku’u Le Messager and Le Crocodile were suspended for one
month, Le Scriboullard, L’Ombre, and La Nation for two months and Echos
du Nord received a three-month suspension. Two other private publications, Le Temps and
According to Norbert Ngoua, the president of the Gabonese private press association, APPEL, and director of the twice-weekly newspaper Nku’u Le Messager, the council did not provide any details about the newspapers’ specific press violations. The journalists are not legally allowed to appeal the suspensions, Ngoua said.
In addition, the council suspended indefinitely a popular call-in chat show called “Entre Nous” on the private TV station Canal Espoir for “numerous deficiencies in moderating the program,” a statement said. According to local journalists, the council was unhappy with the way the moderator allowed the public to be openly critical of individuals on the air.
- November 12, 2009 4:59 PM ET
- Short URLhttps://cpj.org/x/35f3
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