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Cote d’ Ivoire ALERT: Supporters of Laurent Gbagbo destroy pro-Ouattara newspapers

A group of supporters of Laurent Gbagbo in Blockhauss, a village in Cocody, a suburb of Abidjan, on March 7, 2011 destroyed copies of pro-Ouattara newspapers on sale.

The pro-Ouattara newspapers returned to the newsstands after a week of absence protest against what they described as “intimidation” and “harassment” by pro-Gbagbo authorities.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the supporters, mainly youths of Blockhauss, ransacked all the newsstands in the village and chased their managers away.

The correspondent said the supporters also expressed their determination to ban all the pro-Ouattara newspapers from circulation in the area.

Cote d’Ivoire UPDATE: Pro-Ouattara newspapers resume publication

The group of newspapers supporting Alassane Ouattara, the internationally recognised President of Cote d’Ivoire, which stopped publishing on March 1, 2011, to protest against intimidation and harassment from pro-Gbagbo authorities, on March 7, resumed publishing after a meeting in Abidjan.

According to the group, the suspension of their action had become necessary as it would enable them to continue with the struggle of ensuring that Ouattara assumes the presidency as was clearly demonstrated by Ivoirians in the second round of the presidential round-off election in November, 2010.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that what provoked the action of these newspapers was the alleged mistreatment of some of the newspapers by the Gbagbo-controlled National Press Council (CNP). On February 25, 2011 the CNP suspended Le Nouveau Réveil for one week and imposed fines between 1 and 2 million CFA francs (about US$2,066 and 4,132) on three other dailies, Le Patriote, Nord-Sud and Le Jour Plus.

Earlier, editors and representatives of six pro-Ouattara newspapers had been grilled by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ivorian Police at the behest of the public prosecutor over their news reports in the wake of the political crisis, in the country.

Cote d’I voire ALERT: State-owned newspaper suffers rocket attack; Journalist union expresses concern about safety of the media

The building, housing the headquaters of the state-owned Fraternité Matin newspaper group was on the night of March 5, 2011 attacked by unidentified persons.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the attackers, who were spotted driving a tainted glass vehicle, launched missile which the police said was from a rocket-propelled grenade weapon, on the building and landed behind the account’s department.

However, the correspondent said the attack which occurred at about 21 hours GMT recorded no casualties as well as material damages.

The police have since commenced investigations into the incident.

In another development, Déby Dalli Gbalawoulou, the director of pro-Gbagbo media regulatory body, National Press Council (CNP), on March 4, 2011 received death threats from an unidentified man believed to be a supporter of Alassane Ouattara, the internationally recognized President of Cote d’ Ivoire.

The correspondent said the threat was communicated through a journalist of Agence Ivoirienne de Presse (AIP), B.A. Chantal, on the telephone. The caller accused the CNP’s director of bullying pro-Ouattara newspapers.

Meanwhile, the National Union of Ivorian Journalists (UNJCI) has expressed deep worry about the continuing deterioration of the working conditions of journalists and media professionals in Cote d’Ivoire since the beginning of the current political crisis.

In a statement on March 3, UNJCI said the working environment in the country has become very dangerous and called on the Ivorian authorities to do whatever they could to preserve freedom of expression in the country.

According to the statement: “freedom of expression and press freedom must be protected at all cost and any attempt to intimidate or muzzle the media as is being done on both sides of the conflict is unacceptable”.

Cote d’ Ivoire ALERT: Three foreign media disappear from Abidjan airwaves

One foreign TV and two radio stations operating in Cote d’Ivoire have disappeared from the airwaves.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the French television France 24 and the two radio stations, BBC and RFI, went off air on March 3 and 2, 2011 respectively.

The correspondent said that there has not been any explanation from the Laurent Gbagbo-controlled National Council for Broadcasting (CNCA), the regulatory body responsible for the broadcast media in the country, and it is also not clear whether the disappearance of the two stations has something to do with the CNCA’s directive on December 2, 2010 which sought to ban all foreign radio and TV channels operating in the country.

International media organisations covering Cote d’Ivoire have been consistently accused by Gbagbo’s government of supporting Alassane Ouattara, the internationally recognised President of the country.

The correspondent said the disappearance of the two channels would deny Ivoirians access to news other than the one-sided news of state-owned Ivorian Broadcasting Corporation (RTI).

At the moment, all pro-Ouattara newspapers have ceased publication to protest what they described as harassment and intimidation by pro-Gbagbo forces. This follows the suspensions and imposition of fines last week by the Gbagbo-controlled authorities. Two pro-Ouattara journalists are currently being held at the civil prison in Abidjan in connection with activities bordering on terrorism.

Cote d’Ivoire ALERT: Ouattara supporters halt distribution of newspapers

Some members of the Rally of Houphouétistes for Democracy and Peace (RHDP), a group supporting Alassane Ouattara, on March 1, 2011 prevented the distribution of pro-Gbagbo newspapers in the eastern and north-eastern part of the country.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that Edipress, a newspaper distribution company, was stopped from distributing the pro-Gbagbo newspapers in several towns and forced to return to Abidjan.

The correspondent said the RHDP supporters took that action on the same day that nine pro-Ouattara newspapers suspended publication in protest against alleged harassment and intimidation from the pro-Gbagbo authorities.

Cote d’ Ivoire ALERT: Pro-Ouattara newspapers stop publishing in protest against “serious threats to free press”

The group of nine newspapers supporting Alassane Ouattara, the internationally recognised President of Cote d’ Ivoire on March 1, 2011 began an indefinite suspension of their publications to protest against what they said were constant harassment and intimidation by pro-Gbagbo forces.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that what prompted the action of the newspapers was the suspension of six newspapers by the print media regulatory body, the National Press Council (CNP), which was recently constituted by Laurent Gbagbo’s government before the expiration of the old CNP.

The Gbagbo-controlled CNP in a communiqué Issued on RTI on February25 announced the suspension of the daily Le Nouveau Réveil for period of one week and also imposed fines between 1 and 2 million CFA francs (approx. 2,066 and 4,132US$) on three other dailies, Le Patriote, Nord-Sud and Le Jour Plus.

This was after editors and representatives of six Ouattara newspapers have been grilled on February 22 by the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ivorian police at the behest of the public prosecutor over their news reports in the wake of the political crisis in the country. They were accused of “inciting the public to civil disobedience and insubordination with regard to the authority of the state.” The editors and journalists were interrogated on a wide range of issues including the reference to Gbagbo as “Mr. Gbagbo” and Alassane Ouattara as “President Ouattara.”

According to the group’s spokesman, Dembele Al Seni, they have been affected by high-handed political decisions by pro-Gbagbo authorities which are taking ruthless measures aimed at closing down their newspapers.

Cote d’Ivoire ALERT: Printer violently killed, fire guts RTI equipment

Marcel Legre, a machine operator of La Refondation Printing Press, printers of Notre Voie, a pro-Gbagbo newspaper, was in the afternoon of February 28, 2011 violently killed allegedly by militants of pro-Ouattara during an armed confrontation in the town of Koumassi in the centre of the country.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the machetes wielding militants of the Rally of Houphouétistes for Democracy and Peace (RHDP) stormed the home of Legre who had returned home after working throughout the night of February 27 and forcibly dragged him.

According to the March 1 issue of the Notre Voie, the militants after attacking Legre dragged him to a location few metres away from his home close to a pharmacy shop, where they inflicted machete wounds to his head and the rest of his body, until he was killed. The attackers then abandoned his body in the embers of tyres they have set on fire.

The newspaper alleged that Legre was murdered because he working for La Refondation.

In another development, transmission of state-owned Ivorian Broadcasting Corporation (RTI) was interrupted in the country, especially in the Abidjan district following clash between the Gbagbo and Ouattara forces which resulted in fire destroying the equipment of the station’s transmitting centre at Abobo in the north of the capital.

Senegal ALERT: Film crew detained by Cassamance gendarmes for three days

A film crew made up of three Senegalese and two French citizens were on Febuary 19, 2011 arrested and detained for three days by Gendarmerie in Ziguinchor, a town in the Cassamance region.

The Senegalese, Aliou Dabo, Boubacar Dabo and Mamady Daffe, who are members of a Dakar-based sports and cultural association, and their two French colleagues, David Perez and Franck Gerard Marie Bourel, were arrested for filming a mock rebel attack in the area, which has since 1982 been experiencing rebel activities from a group demanding independence from the Senegalese government.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the five persons were freed on Febuary 22 after appearing before the state prosecutor.

The crew were accused of filming without a permit, a necessary requirement for non-Senegalese citizens.

The two French citizens who were in the country for the World Social Forum have since returned to France.

Sierra Leone ALERT: Newspaper faces criminal prosecution

The Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) on February 24, 2011 condemned threats by the country’s authorities to prosecute Sylvia Olayinka Blyden, publisher of Awareness Times, a privately-owned Freetown-basednewspaper with the antiquated criminal libel law.

According to SLAJ, the use of the seditious criminal libel law is illegal and a threat to media freedom and free expression.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) correspondent reported that SLAJ condemnation followed a complaint that the authorities filed against the Awareness Times at the Independent Media Commission (IMC), the media regulatory body, on February 22, over an article headlined : “‘What’s the Colour of the APC Leader’s Underwear?’

The article written by Johnson on February 17 accused President Koroma, who is also the chairman of the ruling All People Congress (APC) of belittling the presidency and reducing political discourse into male politician underwears’ and that his behavior has become known as the “Koromaism ”

The correspondent said the country’s Attorney General, Frank Bai Kargbo, in the complaint warned that, should the IMC fail to sanction Johnson, the government would be left with no option than to resort to existing provisions including the use of criminal prosecution under the Public Order Act of 1965.

“I shall be obliged, if the IMC would treat this complaint with utmost seriousness and urgency and bring appropriate sanctions at the disposal of the Commission to bear, ‘” the letter added.

“Even though SLAJ respects the rights and dignity of public officials and other members in society, we encourage them to make use of the Independent Media Commission, when they feel aggrieved against the media”, Umaru Fofana, SLAJ president appealed to the authorities. .

SLAJ reminded President Koroma redeem its government campaign pledge by repealing the law.

Coté d’ Ivoire UPDATE: Two Detained TV journalists refused bail

Ladji Aboubacar Sanogo and Kangbé Yayoro, two reporters of pro-Ouattara Télévision Notre Patrie (TVNP) in Bouaké, the second largest city in Coté d’ I voire were sent back to prison custody on February 24, 2011 after being denied bail by public prosecutor office in connection with alleged terrorists activities.

Sanogo and Kangbé are facing a charge relating to an “offence against national security” for working for TVNP, which belongs to the Forces Nouvelles that waged a rebellion against Gbagbo’s government in the early 2000s. The trial is expected to commence on February 28.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the Public Prosecutor’s office in Abidjan (Plateau) presided over by Justice Mme Guéhi Kointahin Nathalie refused the bail on the grounds that the case of two journalists has not been heard.

The correspondent said it followed an application for bail filed on February 21 by Coulibaly Brahima and Soro Idrissa, lawyers of the accused.

Sanogo and Kangbé have been in detention since their arrests by the Defence and Security Forces of the Ivorian army, loyal to Laurent Gbagbo on January 28. After their arrests, they were tortured severely and sent to the headquaters of the National Gendarmerie before being transferred to the Abidjan civil Prison (MACA) on February 18.

Sierra Leone ALERT: SLAJ to sue opposition politician over attacks on two newspaper journalists

The Sierra Leonean Association of Journalists (SLAJ) at an extraordinary general meeting on February 24, 2011 resolved to institute legal action against an opposition presidential aspirant, who allegedly masterminded attacks on two journalists with the Awareness Times, a privately-owned Freetown-based newspaper.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the resolution followed recommendations by a Committee set up to investigate attacks on Abdul Karim Kabia, and James Bampia Bundu, acting editor and reporter respectively of the newspaper in late December 2010.

The correspondent said SLAJ is seeking legal advice and would soon bring court action against Julius Maada , presidential aspirant of the opposition Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) and his supporters who attacked the two journalists.

In a complaint to SLAJ, Kabia said that he has been receiving constant threats on his life after Bio threatened on December 7, 2010 over article he(Maada Bio )deemed critical. The editor added that, “continuing publishing articles on Maada Bio and his supporters would put my life on the line”.

In the case of Bampia, he complained that on December 22, 2010 he was attacked at the premises of a Freetown court by a supporter of Maada Bio, who was identified as Foday Yansanneh .

Cote d’Ivoire ALERT: Pan African TV crew attacked

Nicolas Négoce and Jacob Compaoré, reporter and cameraman respectively of Vox Africa, a Pan African TV station, were in the afternoon of February 18, 2011 assaulted by security guards of Petroci hydrocarbon station in Cocody, a suburb of Abidjan, the capital of Cote d’Ivoire.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)’s correspondent reported that the guards seized the camera belonging to the crew and prevented them from filming a group of protesting women who had gathered in front of the station in search of butane gas which is in short supply in the country.

The correspondent said the security guards, who described Vox Africa as a “pirate station”, said Vox Africa had no right to film the gas station without the permission of the management.

The camera was given back to the journalists following the intervention of Ahoua Don Mello, a spokesman of the Gbagbo government.