Bantaba in Cyberspace
Bantaba in Cyberspace
Home | Profile | Register | Active Topics | Active Polls | Members | Private Messages | Search | FAQ | Invite a friend
Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?

 All Forums
 Politics Forum
 Politics: Gambian politics
 Regional court orders Gambia to release journalist
 New Topic  Topic Locked
 Printer Friendly
| More
Author Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  

Momodou



Denmark
11800 Posts

Posted - 10 Jun 2008 :  21:58:20  Show Profile Send Momodou a Private Message
Reporters Without Borders
Press release

9 June 2008

GAMBIA

Regional court orders Gambia to release journalist missing since arrest in July 2006


Reporters Without Borders welcomes a regional court ruling ordering Gambia to release Chief Ebrima Manneh, a reporter who was arrested by the National Intelligence Agency on 7 July 2006 and has been missing ever since. The ruling, issued on 5 June by the Community Court of Justice of the Economic Community Of West African States(ECOWAS), is the first of its kind concerning a journalist.

The press freedom organisation is outraged by the way the Gambian authorities have behaved in this case, above all their refusal to cooperate with the court and the probability that they will take no action in response to its historic ruling.

"This decision is a victory for those who have been fighting for years against the impunity with which the Gambia authorities have repeatedly violated human rights," Reporters Without Borders said. "But we fear for the life of Manneh, one of the victims of a brutal and intolerant regime, and we fear that this victory for the rule of law could be quickly marred by President Yahya Jammeh's contempt for justice and by the awful reality of what may have happened."

In its ruling, issued in response to a petition by the Media Foundation for West Africa, a regional organisation based in the Ghanian capital of Accra, the Abuja-based court also ordered the government to pay 100,000 dollars (63,000 euros) in damages.

The opposition tri-weekly Foroyaa reported in January 2007 that Manneh was being held in a police station in Fatoto, a small town 400 km east of the capital. A witness who was inside Mile Two prison told Reporters Without Borders that Manneh was transferred from there to a Banjul hospital in very poor condition in July 2007. He has not been seen since and according to this witness, whose account is credible, he died in detention.

Manneh, who worked for the privately-owned, pro-government Daily Observer newspaper, was arrested by NIA agents in his office five days after the end of an African Union summit that was held in the Gambian capital Banjul on 1-2 July 2006. The reasons for his arrest were unknown, but several journalists working for the independent press were arrested around the time for allegedly trying to disrupt the summit.

Founded in 1991 and consisting of seven independent judges, the ECOWAS court has since 2005 been empowered to hear complaints from any citizen of a member state about alleged violations of the community's agreements, decisions, treaties or conventions.

__________________________________________

Leonard VINCENT
Bureau Afrique / Africa desk
Reporters sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
47, rue Vivienne
75002 Paris, France
Tel : (33) 1 44 83 84 76
Fax : (33) 1 45 23 11 51
Email : afrique@rsf.org / africa@rsf.org
Web : www.rsf.org

A clear conscience fears no accusation - proverb from Sierra Leone
  Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  
 New Topic  Topic Locked
 Printer Friendly
| More
Jump To:
Bantaba in Cyberspace © 2005-2024 Nijii Go To Top Of Page
This page was generated in 0.12 seconds. User Policy, Privacy & Disclaimer | Powered By: Snitz Forums 2000 Version 3.4.06