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KENYA: Police Raid Privately-Owned Weekly Newspaper

ISSUE 214
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This Week's Somaliland News

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Speakers Of Both Chambers Of Parliament Leave For Wales‎

Somaliland Times Interview With Speaker Of Somaliland House Of Representatives  

Museveni Opens Big Lead In Uganda Election‎‎‎‎

Somaliland Says Arrests 84 Yemeni Fishermen‎

Starting Over In Somalia: How To Break The Cycle Of Failure‎‎

Somaliland Question Puts President Yusuf In A Vulnerable Position

Regional Affairs

Diaspora’s Connection In Somaliland’s Reconstruction

The Hypocrisy Attendant To International Recognition‎

South African Ophir Offered Energy Concession In Somaliland

‘Federalism Working In Nigeria’‎

Analysis: Somali Warlords Unite Against Extremists‎‎

Saving The Timbuktu Manuscripts‎‎‎‎‎

Bin Laden’s African Mistress Releases Memoirs

KENYA: Police Raid Privately-Owned Weekly Newspaper‎

Somali Warlords Start Peace Talks‎

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International News

Special Rapporteur On Right To Food Deeply Concerned About Risk Of Famine In The Horn Of ‎Africa‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

U.S. Marines ‘Devastated’ After Crash‎‎

UK Government: Sniffing Out Landmines In Africa

UN Envoy Appeals To Warring Factions In Mogadishu To Spare Civilians‎

Immigrants Ponder Future After Tyson Closure‎‎

Men Sentenced In Robberies Directed By Elder‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Business & Economy: Somaliland's Promises To Ethiopian Businesses

Montenegro Plans Independence Bid‎‎

My Experience of Somalia‎‎

THE PROUD KING’ From The Book Of Legends, By Horace E. Scudder

Unrecognized Somaliland’s Long Quest For Elusive Independence

Forbidden Love‎‎‎‎

Somali Mps Look To Legislate, A Year After Brawling

UNHCR Calls For European Leadership To Bridge Gap Between Humanitarian Assistance And ‎Development Aid

Case Study Report

The Ticking Bomb:‎ The Educational Underachievement of Somali Children in the British Schools

Opinions

Berbera Feels The Heat Of Land Grabbing‎‎

Should The United States Rein In Ethiopia?‎‎‎‎

The Cartoons And The Carnage

Who Shelved The Role Of Attorney General’s Office In The Case Of Joint Needs Assessment Program?‎‎‎


By Somalilandtimes network

Reporters Without Borders Press release

21 February 2006

Reporters Without Borders sent a strong protest to the Kenyan authorities after police raided the premises of the privately-owned The Weekly Citizen on 20 February after it carried an article about power struggles within the presidency.

The organization also expressed its dismay at a prison sentence, with the option of a fine - that was upheld on appeal against a journalist on The People Daily, a privately-owned newspaper in northern Kenya, for an article that appeared in 1999.

"It is a desperate litany of ills: A massive police raid, indiscriminate arrests, an absurd sentence and journalists forced into hiding," said Reporters Without Borders. "These two cases show the twin evils of draconian legislation and a government which has no hesitation in using it."

"If President Mwai Kibaki wishes to issue a denial or seek a correction in a newspaper, there are democratic ways to set about it. And if they do not exist in Kenya, it is up to him to work with the independent press to create them," the organization concluded.

A police unit, led by Nairobi operations chief, Julius Ndegwa, and the deputy head of the provincial CID, Isaiah Osugo, led a major search for editorial executives at the Moi Avenue headquarters of the tabloid The Weekly Citizen and several printers in Kirinyaga Road.

Those arrested in the raid were: journalist Johnstone Mativo, graphic designer Ken Teyie, receptionist Catherine Oyando, printer Paul Kimani, and distribution assistant Austin Alwaka, It is not known what charges have been made against them. Several witnesses said that an unknown number of street sellers were also arrested. The Weekly Citizen's managing editor, Tom Alwaka, who has been in hiding for two days, said a computer had apparently been seized.

The weekly, which is known for its stories about sex cases, has carried several front page articles criticizing Mwai Kibaki's presidency. These said that the president, who was unable to govern the country, had delegated his powers to his special advisor, Stanley Murage, and that a power struggle was under way between a woman presented as his second wife, Mary Wambui, and "the first lady", Lucy Kibaki.

In an unrelated case, Johann Wandetto, journalist on The People Daily, was sentenced on appeal on 16 February 2006 to six months in prison or a 50,000-shilling fine (about 600 euros) for "publication of alarmist information". On 6 March 1999, the paper carried an article under his by-line, headlined, "Militiamen rob elite guards shock as Moi men surrender meekly". It told how the body guards of then president Daniel arap Moi had fallen into an ambush, set by Pokot militiamen to steal their weapons, near the western town of Kapenguria.

Four judges successively heard the case without reaching a decision so that six years elapsed before the appeal court judgment. In his ruling, the judge, Wanjiru Karanja, said, "The issue is not whether the article caused alarm or fear among the people, what is important is that it had the capacity to do so."

Wandetto, who paid the fine the day after the appeal verdict, had been sentenced at the original hearing on 16 February 2000 to 18 months in prison and had spent one week in custody.


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