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Newspaper Critical Of Islamic Courts Is Publicly Burned In Somaliland's Second City

ISSUE 248
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Leader Of Kulmiye Party Back At Home After Long Trip Abroad

Suicide Bombers "Heading For Somaliland"

US Silence Is Deadly

Newspaper burning immortalizes media defiance

Somaliland President Pardons 600 Prisoners

Balancing The U.S. War On Terror And The Somalia Quagmire

''War Clouds Loom Over Somalia As Military Fronts Open Up Amid A Flurry Of Diplomacy''

Regional Affairs

Newspaper Critical Of Islamic Courts Is Publicly Burned In Somaliland's Second City

Somali-Canadians Join African 'Taliban'
Some return home to serve in hardline Islamic militia

Designation of Hassan Abdullah Hersi al-Turki under Executive Order 13224

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Diplomat Sees Proxy Eritrea-Ethiopia War In Somalia

Americans Question Bush on 9/11 Intelligence

Muslim Students 'More Tolerant'

US Official: Somalia Must Not Continue As Terrorist Safe Haven

Oil Boosts Arab GDP Above $1 Trillion

Scholars Raise 'Errors' In Pope Speech

Somalis Under Siege In South Africa

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

From T.O. to Mogadishu

Madonna Shines Spotlight On African Adoptions

Somalia: Will Somalia Be the Final Battle Between Islam And the West?

Somaliland Women Win The Bread
They take jobs men are too proud to accept

Former Militia Find New Purpose

Fear Of Islamic Law Scares Off Pirates

Somali Sabre-Rattling

Somalia: How Much More Suffering for Somali People?

Food for thought

Opinions

President Rayale And Puntland State Present The Biggest Threat To Somaliland; Not The UIC

A Revolutionary Momentum: Time To Choose Between Freedom And Holy Dictatorship

Silencing The Watchdog

Somaliland and ICU war inevitable or wishful thinking of reactionaries?

Islamophobia, Terrorism and Fragmented Immigrant Communities

Open Letter to Eng. Mohamed Hashi

Criticizing Islamic Courts In Somalia?


Reporters Without Borders

Press release, 17 October 2006

Reporters Without Borders voiced concern today that an angry crowd in Buroa, the second largest city in the northern breakaway territory of Somaliland, burned more than a thousand copies of the independent daily Haatuf on 13 October on the grounds that it criticizes the Mogadishu-based Islamic courts.

"Newspaper-burning is serious and should be condemned by all those who claim to be the guarantors of peace in Somalia," the press freedom organization said. "The Somaliland authorities must take steps to identify and punish those behind this public outrage. And those who incited this mob should realize it is an unacceptable and dangerous thing to do. Criticism is an inalienable right that you suppress to your own cost."

Around 100 people took part in the public newspaper-burning in protest against Haatuf's reports criticizing the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), which has controlled Mogadishu and two thirds of Somalia's provinces since the summer. Somaliland has had de facto independence from the rest of Somalia since 1991.

The Reporters Without Borders local partner organization, the National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ), quoted Somaliland-based journalists as saying the crowd had gathered in response to calls from local religious leaders linked to the UIC.

The NUSOJ said Haatuf had received several anonymous calls threatening to set fire to its office in Hargeysa, Somaliland's capital. Haatuf - one of the most widely-circulated newspapers in all parts of Somalia - reacted by publishing the text of the threatening calls along with the phone numbers from where they had been made.

NUSOJ secretary-general Omar Faruk Osman told Reporters Without Borders: "This is a first in Somalia's history. Never before has a newspaper been publicly burned anywhere in our country."

Source: RSF Africa

 


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