|
The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the recent arrest
and two-week imprisonment of three journalists from
Muslim-oriented newspapers on criminal defamation charges in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Editor Ezedin Mohamed and Publisher Maria Kadim of Al Kidus and
Editor Ibrahim Mohamed of Selefia were arrested on February 16
and held for nearly two weeks. All three were released on
February 29 on a bail of 20,000 Birr (US$2,127) each, Ezedin
Mohamed said.
The editors and publisher were arrested for reprinting a letter
that was purportedly written by Elias Redman, the vice president
of the Ethiopian Islamic Affairs Supreme Council, according to
the two editors and local news reports. Reprinted from the Web
site Ethiopianmuslims, the letter criticized the minister of
education's proposed policy to ban school prayers at public
education institutions.
Redman said the letter had not actually been written by him; he
filed a complaint with the Addis Ababa police that said the two
newspapers had damaged the council's relations with the
government, according to local journalists.
"CPJ condemns the criminal prosecution for defamation of these
journalists," said CPJ's executive director Joel Simon. "Use of
the criminal law is designed to muzzle critical journalism -
those who believe they have been libelled can pursue a case in
civil court. We call on the authorities to drop the prosecution
immediately and return all equipment seized from the
newspapers."
The police confiscated computers and printers from both
newspaper offices; none of the equipment has yet been returned,
the editors told CPJ.
This is not the first time these publications have been
arbitrarily targeted by the government. A day after the Muslim
holiday of Eid Al-Adha, on December 21, police arrested and
detained Ezedin Mohamed for six days without charge, he said.
According to local reports, the police have not finished their
investigation into the current case and it has not been decided
yet whether the court case will recommence. The editors say they
are facing serious financial challenges due to what they say was
an exorbitant bail price and the confiscated equipment. Al Kidus
was able to continue publishing over the last few weeks while
Selefia has not been able to produce an issue but hope to this
week.
CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization
that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more
information, visit http://www.cpj.org
|