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Justice at Last! How Widow Defeated State in 15-years Battle Against Impunity

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On March 28, 2014, the Justices at the Arusha-based African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) finally dismantled the fortified walls of impunity that had stood in the way of justice for a widow and her family for the last 15 years. It was the day of victory for Genevieve Zongo, wife of the late celebrated Burkinabe Journalist, Norbert Zongo.

The venue was the Kibo Hall of the Julius Nyerere Conservation Centre, which served as the seat of the ACHPR. The Law Lords delivered a seminal verdict upholding a complaint by Genevieve and the chamber of justice resonated with a harmonious chorus of the three words “justice at last” which came from a sobbing Genevieve and family members who had endured the pain of a palpable denial of justice for a decade and a half.

The matter dates back to 1998 when Zongo, an iconic investigative journalist and Director of the weekly newspaper, l’Indépendant,was gruesomely murdered alongside three others. The other three were Abdoulaye Nikiema, Blaise Ilboudo and Ernest Zongoa. Their charred corpses were found in the car which was transporting them at a few kilometers from Sapouy, in the south of Burkina Faso.

At the time of their murder, Zongo was said to be investigating a serious case of corruption involving the brother of Burkina Faso’s President, Blaise Campaore. Subsequent investigations into the murder led to the indictment of a member of the Presidential Guard, Marcel Kafando, as having a hand in the murder of the four.

In mid 2006, charges proffered against the Presidential guard were dropped by a Court in the country’s capital, Ouagadougou. In August the same year, an Appeals Court upheld the dropping of charges against the Presidential guard, to the utter disappointment of family members of the deceased and free expression advocates in the region.

After several years of prolonged and fruitless attempts to find justice in the local Court rooms of Ouagadougou, Mrs. Zongo filed a complaint before the ACHPR in 2011. She was supported in the case by a multi-national team of human rights lawyers from Burkina Faso, Senegal, Tanzania and Nigeria.

The road to justice was long and tortuous. It involved going through a long stretch of stormy waters of impunity and constant threats to her personal security but Mrs. Zongo was ready to weather the storm to get to the island of Justice. The fight against impunity meant moving from the local Court rooms of Ouagadougou in West Africa to the continent’s highest Court in East Africa. Nonetheless, Mrs. Zongo was ready and did fly over Kilimanjaro several times to Tanzania to fight for what she deserved – justice.

In Arusha, it wasn’t an uncontested legal battle. Burkina Faso was fully represented in Court by a team of state lawyers ready and willing to fight against justice.

In their pleadings before the highest Court of the continent, Mrs. Zongo’s legal team argued that Norbert Zongo and his companions were assassinated in 1998 but those responsible for the odious crime had not been identified and no justice had been rendered to the victims and their families. The state lawyers however objected to the claims by the plaintiffs, by throwing their first legal punch.

The first argument by the state lawyers was that “the African Court, only fully established in 2005, could not hear a case about a killing that occurred in 1998. The court wisely threw out the objection, ruling that the failure to diligently look for and find the killers, if true, was a continuing one, which had not yet ended,” the Guardian newspaper of Nigeria reported.

As was reported by the Guardian newspaper, the state lawyers for Burkina Faso continued to fire other legal missiles in their attempt to quench the blazing tornado of facts from the complainants but to no avail.

After suffering the first technical knock-out from the Court, the state lawyers went on to fire their next and apparently most lethal legal weapon, which had some connection to the United States. This was it: “Burkina Faso could not be held responsible for failing to find the killers of the late journalist. After all, no one has held the United States of America – the most powerful country in the world – responsible for failing to find the killers of John F. Kennedy.” But this too was repelled by the Court as the Law Lords roundly rejected the argument.

Massive Boost for Free Expression and International Justice

The ruling of Africa’s highest Court represents not only justice for the families of Norbert Zongo and his colleagues, but also offers a massive boost for press freedom and freedom of expression on the continent. Significantly also, the ruling accentuates the invaluable role of international justice mechanisms.

For example, the Court explicitly held that “ the failure of a government to diligently seek and bring to account the persons responsible for the assassination of a journalist, intimidates the media, has a chilling effect on free expression, violates the human rights of journalists, endangers truth and should not be allowed.”

Such a profound declaration from the Court offers hope and impetus for successful advocacy for freedom of expression and press freedom, which are guaranteed by several international and regional instruments. The ruling will also, hopefully, send a strong signal to governments that endorse, orchestrate or perpetrate free expression violations, that ultimately they will face justice.

Governments and supporters of governments who abuse journalists and other human rights defenders should also know that they may find only temporal solace in the non-independent and government-controlled local Courts, but ultimately justice awaits them at the ACHPR, the International Criminal Court (ICC) or other international justice institutions. This is why institutions like the ICC remains critical for justice and peace in Africa.

Congratulations, Mrs. Zongo, for your determination and well fought battle.

By Sulemana Braimah,

Executive Director,

Media Foundation for West Africa.

[email protected]

Liberia Alert: Journalist arrested, charged with Terrorism

Henry Costa, a radio talk show host in Liberia was on March 21, 2014, arrested, detained at the Monrovia Central Prison and charged with “Terrorist Threat, Menacing, and Criminal Coercion”. Reporting the incident, The Analyst newspaper in Liberia said the arrest was based on a complaint filed against Costa by Fombah Sirleaf, Director of National Security Agency and son of the country’s President.

The newspaper said Costa’s lawyer, Sayma Syrenius Cephus, confirmed the arrest and added that his client was arrested and charged with terrorism following a suit Fumba Sirleaf filed on February 26, alleging that Costa had challenged him to a fight on his show – The Costa Show on Hott FM.

The show which is very critical of government, institutions and individuals was said to have been interrupted that day by management of Hott FM and he was forced to exit the station. Before his arrest, Costa was set to start the show on another station Voice FM on March 24.

The MFWA’s partner organization in Liberia, the Center for Media Studies and Peace-building (CEMESP), has however reported that Costa was on March 24, temporarily released on bail after his lawyers secured a bond of an undisclosed amount. According to CEMESP, Costa on his release said, “It has not been an easy thing, but to know that you stand with us matters more than anything else. It has given me and us a renewed conviction that what indeed we are doing has a purpose because it is appreciated by you, you gave your time, you were in the sun, you were out there for us and I am just overwhelmed, what I have seen has given me the conviction that indeed the majority of the people of this country mean good.”

The case continues at the Monrovia City Court and Costa is to appear at every hearing with his lawyers.

For more information please contact,
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

Follow us on Twitter @TheMFWA
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Guinea Alert : Journalist sacked for criticising president

Guinea’s Minister of Communications Al Husseini Makanera al Kaké, on March 18, 2014, sacked Amadou Diouldé Diallo, a sports journalist with the nation’s broadcaster Radiodiffusion-Télévision Guinéenne (RTG).

The MFWA’s correspondent reported that Diallo was on March 13, invited to feature as a guest on a popular programme on privately-owned radio station, Espace FM.

Diallo, a very popular sports journalist in Guinea, reportedly accused President Alpha Condé of lying about renovating The Palace of Nations, a place where visiting heads of states from other countries are received. He said the past president, Lantana Conté, was rather the one who renovated it.

“The President is lying, before he came, Lantana Conté had already started the renovation of this palace”, Diallo is reported to have said. He was subsequently sacked on March 18. The dismissal which was communicated in a statement said, “The position of the President is sacred, and when a public service journalist insults the head of state, he must pay dearly for that offence. That is why I relieved Amadou Diouldé Diallo of his duties.” “We should not insult a head of state. And when it is a journalist from the state media who is doing so, it is even worse” the minister said.

For more information please contact,
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

Follow us on Twitter @TheMFWA
Visit our Facebook page Media Foundation for West Africa

Ghana ALERT: Youth attack radio station, set cars ablaze

Irate youth on March 11, 2014, attacked a privately-owned radio station Radio Justice located in Tamale, in the Northern Region of Ghana.

According to the station manager, Kasim Hamza, the incident happened while the station was having a panel discussion as part of their morning show. He said while the discussion was going on, some angry youth entered the premises of the radio station and demanded to see one of the panellists on the programme who is a member of the biggest opposition party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

According to Hamza, they made a call to the police when the irate youth entered the radio station but it took the police a while to get the station. The police, he said, did not take any measures when they arrived, until the youth started throwing stones at the building housing the radio station.

The irate youth damaged louvre blades in the process and set four vehicles and a motorbike ablaze. One of the vehicles belongs to Hamza while the other 3 belong to a financial institution located in the same building as the radio station.

This attack on Radio Justice comes in the wake of violent clashes between youth of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the NPP.
The MFWA condemns the attack on the radio station and appeals to the police to protect journalists as they try to discharge their duties. We also urge the police to investigate the incident and bring the perpetrators to book.

For more information please contact
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/MFWAALERTS
Visit our Facebook page Media Foundation for West Africa

Ghana ALERT: Youth attack radio station, set cars ablaze

Irate youth on March 11, 2014, attacked a privately-owned radio station Radio Justice located in Tamale, in the Northern Region of Ghana. According to the station manager, Kasim Hamza, the incident happened while the station was having a panel discussion as part of their morning show. He said while the discussion was going on, some angry youth entered the premises of the radio station and demanded to see one of the panellists on the programme who is a member of the biggest opposition party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

According to Hamza, they made a call to the police when the irate youth entered the radio station but it took the police a while to get to the station. The police, he said, did not take any measures when they arrived, until the youth started throwing stones at the building housing the radio station.
The irate youth damaged louvre blades in the process and set four vehicles and a motorbike ablaze. One of the vehicles belongs to Hamza while the other three belong to a financial institution located in the same building as the radio station.

This attack on Radio Justice comes in the wake of violent clashes between youth of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the NPP.

The MFWA condemns the attack on the radio station and appeals to the police to protect journalists as they try to discharge their duties. We also urge the police to investigate the incident and bring the perpetrators to book.

For more information please contact
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

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African CSOs urge Ghana, others to pass RTI law

A group of nine civil society organisations including the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) that is leading a campaign to promote the passage and implementation of Access to Information (ATI) legislation in Africa, has urged countries without an ATI legislation such as Ghana, to take urgent steps to have the law in place.

In a joint statement issued after its meeting in Johannesburg on March 5 and 6, 2014, the group stated that countries that are yet to pass access to information law should use as a standard, the Model Law on Access to Information, developed by the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Access to Information in Africa.

The civil society group that constitutes the Working Group of the African Platform on Access to Information (APAI) is made up of the MFWA, Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA), The Africa Freedom of Information Centre (AFIC), Article 19 – West and East Africa, Highway Africa, African Editors Forum, Media Rights Agenda (MRA), Open Democracy Advisory Centre (ODAC), and International Federation of Journalists (IFJ).

Below is the full statement issued by the APAI working group.

Statement

Issued by the Working Group of the African Platform on Access to Information (APAI) at the end of its Meeting held in Johannesburg, South Africa, on March 5 & 6, 2014

The Working Group of the African Platform on Access to Information (APAI) met in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Wednesday, March 5 and Thursday, March 6, 2014.

At the end of its meeting, the Working Group unanimously adopted and issued this Statement:

1. The Working Group calls on the African Union (AU) to give effect to Resolution 222, adopted in Banjul, The Gambia, by the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights at the end of its 50th Ordinary Session on May 2, 2012, wherein the Commission requested the AU to consider proclaiming 28 September as International Right to Information Day in Africa, as proposed in the APAI Declaration, adopted in Cape Town, South Africa, on September 19, 2011.

2. The Working Group acknowledges the increasing number of national legislation on access to information that have been passed by African countries in the last few years and calls for greater commitment towards more effective implementation of such laws to enable them realize their full potential.

3. The Working Group calls on other African countries that have not yet passed national access to information laws to take urgent steps to do so, using as a standard, the Model Law on Access to Information, developed by the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Access to Information in Africa and adopted by the African Commission, so as to guarantee for their citizens a right to information in accordance with international law.

4. The Working Group calls on the United Nations to endorse the APAI Declaration and proclaim September 28 of every year International Right to Information Day, as a date to raise awareness about the importance of the right of access to information throughout the world.

5. The Working Group notes important right to information commitments in Open Government Partnership (OGP) Country Action plans of South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Liberia and Ghana. Calls upon these Governments to fully implement these commitments. The Working Group also calls upon the Governments of Malawi and Sierra Leone to do the same inclusion of adoption of the access to information law and strong implementation of FOI law in respective OGP country action plans in the case of Malawi and Sierra Leone respectively.

6. The Working Group unanimously elects Edetaen Ojo, Executive Director of Media Rights Agenda in Nigeria, as its Chair for the next one year. He succeeds the erstwhile Chair, Mr. Gilbert Sendugwa, Executive Director of the Africa Freedom of Information Centre (AFIC) in Uganda.

Adopted in Johannesburg, South Africa, this Thursday, the 6th day of March, 2014.

Issued by the MFWA in Accra on March 10, 2014

MFWA Commences Media Development Project in Ghana

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) has commenced a major media development project in Ghana aimed at enhancing both professional standards and the watchdog role of the Ghanaian media.

The MFWA’s Programme Officer for Media Development and Democratisation, Ms. Abigail Larbi, explained that the project forms part of the MFWA’s objective of strengthening the media to play a major role in the promotion of transparent, accountable and participatory governance in Ghana, particularly within the local governance structures.

“As an organisation, we recognise the tremendous role the media can play in improving our governance and promoting development. But it is not just any media that can offer such contributions. What we are aspiring for is a highly professional, ethical, critical and independent media, which will be doing very in-depth reporting on critical areas such as health, education, extractives and governance as a whole,” said Ms. Larbi.

The project, which is being implemented with funding from STAR-Ghana, will be formerly launched on Thursday, March 13. It will involve daily monitoring of ethical violations on 25 selected radio stations, 10 newspapers and five news websites across the country. Monthly reports on ethical violations occurring on the target media houses will then be compiled and publicised. For each month, a panel of media experts will be convened to discuss ethical infractions that are recorded and ways to avoid such violations.

While seeking to promote professional standards, the project will at the same time, implement activities that will help enhance the watchdog role of the media and contribute to improving governance in the country.

Ms. Abigail explained that there are many fine journalists with great story ideas, evidence of wrongdoing in many sectors of the country and fantastic human interest stories that need to be told.

“In many instances, however, such stories are not pursued by journalists because they may not have the resources for travelling around to talk to relevant sources and gather the necessary pieces of evidence to do complete, credible and impactful stories. This is why under the project, we will be providing funding to journalists to do investigative and critical reporting especially in the areas of health, education, extractives and corruption,” Ms. Larbi explained.

She said immediately after the launch, the MFWA will advertise on its website and other media platforms, a call for applications from Ghanaian Journalists who require funding to do investigative reporting on critical developmental issues.

Issued by the MFWA in Accra on March 10, 2014

Ghana ALERT: Military man assaults journalist, destroys his camera

Geoffrey Buta, a photographer of the state-owned newspaper The Ghanaian Times was on March 10, 2014 assaulted by a military man in Tamale, in the Northern Region of Ghana.

Buta had attended a press conference organised by the Police to brief journalists about some clashes that took place between some youth believed to be from the ruling National Democratic Congress and the main opposition party, New Patriotic Party. While at the press conference, he noticed a confrontation between some military personnel and youth nearby and decided to go and take pictures.

A member of the military personnel who was only identified as Boam without any warning charged on Buta, assaulted him, destroyed his camera and seized his Samsung Tab.

“He just walked straight to me and started demanding my camera. So while I tried to resist, he hit my hands with a stick. My camera lens got destroyed in the process and then he took the camera”, Buta told MFWA.

According to Buta, one Lieutenant Tamakloe who was leading the military personnel assured him to get his Samsung tab back but could not make any assurances about his camera that had been destroyed by Boam.

The MFWA strongly condemns this attack and demands that the Military High Command takes appropriate action against Boam and caution their men to refrain from attacking journalists when they are discharging their professional duties.

For more information please contact
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

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Sierra Leone UPDATE: Charges against journalists dropped

Managing Editor of Independent Observer Jonathan Leigh and his colleague Bai Bai Sesay were on March 10, 2014, cautioned and discharged by a High Court in the Sierra Leonean capital, Freetown.

The MFWA’s correspondent reported that, prosecuting counsel, Ajibola Manley-Spaine, informed the presiding judge Justice Abdulai Cham, that the State had decided to drop 25 of the 26 charges of seditious libel.

The journalists then pleaded guilty to the remaining charge of conspiracy to publish a seditious article against the President of Sierra Leone, Ernest Bai Koroma.
Counsel for the journalists Ansu Lansana, pleaded to the court to discharge Leigh and Sesay indicating that they had apologised to President Koroma. The presiding judge subsequently cautioned the journalists and discharged them.

Leigh and Sesay were arrested on October 18, 2013, for publishing an article said to be have been defamatory to President Bai Koroma and detained for 6 days without charge. Following protests by MFWA and Sierra Leone Journalists Association (SLAJ), the two editors were subsequently charged with 26 counts of seditious and defamatory libel.
If they had been found guilty, the two journalists would have faced up to a three-year jail term.

The MFWA welcomes the discharge of the journalists and urges journalists to adhere to the ethics of the profession. At the same time, we urge the Sierra Leone security force to uphold the principles of free expression and respect the rights of the media.

We also commend SLAJ for their contribution towards the discharge of the journalists.

For more information please contact
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

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Twitter         @MFWAALERTS
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Hefty court fines a threat to media survival in Ghana – MFWA

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) fears some media organisations could be extinct if the courts do not show a compassionate concern in awarding costs against them.

Sulemana Braimah, Executive Director for the Foundation says although some media organisations have been reckless in their reportage, the courts must also recognise the environment within which they operate by imposing reasonable fines on them rather than “prohibited fines”.

Two newspapers – Daily Guide and The Informer – were last week slapped with Gh¢250,000 and Gh¢300,000 respectively – for publishing articles deemed libelous by the Fast Track High Court in Accra.

The Daily Guide was found guilty of defaming Johnson Asiedu Nketia, General Secretary of the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC), by publishing an article claiming Mr. Asiedu Nketia used his position as chairman of the Bui Power Authority Board to divert building materials for his personal building project.

Similarly, the Court also found The Informer culpable for a publication alleging that former Chief of Staff in the John Kufuor Administration, Kwadwo Mpiani, connived with his friends at Evans Timbers to clear goods at the port without proper documentation and also under-invoiced. The plaintiff, Evans Timbers argued that the publication caused serious damages to its corporate image and reputation as a timber processing and exporting company by being portrayed as guilty of subverting the national interest and causing financial loss to the state.

But speaking on Saturday, March 8, 2014 on Newsfile on the Joy News channel on Multi TV and broadcast live on Joy FM, Sulemana Braima wants the courts to mull over the vital role of the media in promoting democracy and shaping society before such sanctions are applied.

“We wouldn’t be that much bothered if we were having a situation where if there is proportionate damages rather than what we are experiencing now, which I think is quite prohibiting…looking at the economy in which we are operating; looking at the circumstances under which our media operate and the financial resources to them…these [fines] are monies that one can say amount to very, very prohibitive sanctions against the media.

“Even if the media were asked to pay a million Ghana cedis, I don’t think that in its self will be able to remedy whatever damages [that] would have been caused to the persons affected”.

Mr. Braimah, however, advised journalists to be circumspect in their reportage in order to avoid being dragged to court over charges of libel and defamation of character.

He announced plans by the Foundation to launch a project to “focus on ethics, and indeed we are going to be monitoring ethical violations in the media and at the same time, we are going to be providing funding to support some quality and professional journalism in the country”.

Veteran journalists and Editor-in-Chief of the New Crusading Newspaper, Abdul Malik Kweku Baako, also pleaded for the courts to be sympathetic with the media in awarding ‘hefty’ judgment against them.

“You cannot challenge the right of somebody to go court…I will appeal to the judiciary to be a bit more sensitive to the environment within which we operate. The first freedom is free expression…if it suffers, all the other freedoms will suffer,” Mr. Baako noted.

Source: myjoyonline.com

Ghana ALERT: Television station crew detained by security personnel

Yaa Hammond, (journalist), Kingsley Acheampong (cameraman), Suleiman Awudu (soundman) and Douglas Kofi Benyin (driver), of privately-owned TV Africa were on March 7, 2014, detained by some security personnel at Adjei Kojo, a suburb of Accra, Ghana’s capital.

A. C. Ohene, head of news and current affairs of TV Africa told MFWA the crew had gone to the area to do a follow-up on a demolition exercise that was undertaken some weeks ago.
He said upon seeing the crew with their branded vehicle, the security personnel questioned them on why they had come to the site. They then searched them, seized their camera, wrist watches, mobile phones and detained them at a camp they had pitched at the demolition site.

They were released after two hours and their wrist watches and mobile phones given to them without the camera.
According to Ohene, on March 10, he accompanied the crew to the site to retrieve the seized camera. One Colonel Nibo and Colonel Ahadzie deleted the video footage of the site the crew had captured on the camera before giving it to them.

Meanwhile the station has filed a complaint at the country’s statutory media regulating body, the National Media Commission (NMC) against the treatment meted out to the crew. “We are asking the NMC to ask the National Security to render an unqualified apology to us. We think this attack on TV Africa is an attack on press freedom”, he added.

The MFWA is worried about the sudden rise in attacks on journalists and media organisations by security personnel and individuals in Ghana. We urge the public and security operatives to recognise the important role the media plays and desist from attacking them when they are performing their professional duties.

For more information please contact
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/MFWAALERTS
Visit our Facebook page Media Foundation for West Africa

Benin ALERT: Journalist arrested, asked to disclose his source

Félicien Fangnon, a journalist with a privately-owned daily Le Matinal newspaper, was on March 4, 2014, arrested and questioned by the members of the country’s judicial police in Cotonou.

The MFWA’s correspondent reported that the interrogation which lasted for about an hour was in relation to a publication in the newspaper written by Fangnon.
The said article titled, “Case of drug storage at the Cotonou harbour: Koussé report gathers dust”, criticised the government for refusing to act on a report submitted by one Alidou Koussé who is the Chief State Control Officer and chairman of a commission set up to look into the storage of some drugs at the Cotonou harbour.

This commission was set up after the visit of the country’s head of state on December 18, 2013. According to the correspondent, the president raised some concerns about why the drugs had been in the harbour since 2012. On December 19, 2013 a decree was passed by cabinet and a commission of enquiry was set up and given a month to submit a report on the storage of the drugs at the Cotonou harbor.

The article also alleged that after over a month of submitting the report, the government had failed to act on it because some state authorities were implicated.
Fangnon has since been released. “They did not manhandle me, but wanted to know the source of my information. Unfortunately, they have no authority to do that” he told our correspondent.

The MFWA urges the government and state authorities to be mindful of the watchdog role of media in the development of societies and entrenchment of democracy and avoid acts that have the tendency to force the media into self-censorship.

For more information please contact:
Sulemana Braimah
Executive Director
MFWA
Accra
Tel: 233-0302-24 24 70
Fax: 233-0302-22 10 84

Follow us on twitter                      @MFWAALERTS
Visit our Facebook page              Media Foundation for West Africa