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Filming Lands Somali Journalists In Trouble

ISSUE 249
Front Page
Index
Headlines

The Somaliland Government Denies Leaning Towards One of Somalia’s Factions

We Will Unify All Somali People Including Somaliland, Ethiopia And Kenya: Turki

Shari'ah Law To Be Applied In Somaliland - President Rayale

Why Islamic Courts Can't Win War Against Govt

UN’s Annan Urges Restraint In Somalia

Filming Lands Somali Journalists In Trouble

Written Answers

Regional Affairs

Held For Arms Smuggling

Somaliland Pushes For Recognition As Tensions Rise

SA, Somali Traders Meet To Solve Conflict

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S. Urges Somalia's Neighbors Not To Interfere

Georgia Trial Believed To Be First In U.S. Over Genital Cutting

U.N. Report Says Somalia Deteriorating

Germany Is Right To Take On A Global Role

Somalia: Up to 12 Countries Could Be Sucked Into Conflict

Camp Falcon : What Really Happened?

A Courageous Man Speaks Out - Hugo Chavez at the UN General Assembly

Islamist Radicals Still On The March In Somalia

Fears Of Jihad In Horn Of Africa

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

A Land In Limbo

Rwandese Business Leaders are keen to invest in Somaliland

Coffee And Controversy In 'Little Mogadishu'

Women Face Increasing Violence In Iraq, Afghanistan And Somalia, Senior U.N. Official Says

OUT OF SOMALIA

Standoff In Somalia

Perilous Somalia Stories Worth Risk, Sacrifice

Food for thought

Opinions

Threat Of A Regional War Looms

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


Nairobi , October 26, 2006 – Three Somali journalists found themselves at daggers end of their government after they had filmed the presence of Ethiopian soldiers on Somali territory. The alleged presence of Ethiopian troops in Somalia, there to aid the transitional government to fight the Jihadist movement, could endanger popular support for authorities.

The filming led to the arrest, interrogation and detention of the journalists on 24 October. Fahad Mohammed Abukar of Baidoa-based 'Warsan Radio', Mohammed Adawe Adam of Mogadishu-based 'Radio Shabelle' and Muktar Mohammed Atosh of Mogadishu-based 'HornAfrik' were arrested in Daynunay, a village 15 kilometers outside Baidoa, the seat of the transitional government's headquarters.

The journalists, who all work for the private media, were arrested on their way from Burhankaba where government troops have been fighting militias loyal to the Islamist movement that controls Mogadishu. Security forces also arrested another three people traveling with the journalists.

Officials of the National Union of Somali Journalists said the journalists were interrogated at Baidoa criminal investigation police before they were held in the city's prison.

Local sources told the Paris-based media watchdog, Reporters sans Frontiéres (RSF), that the men were caught in possession of a digital video camera containing footage of the body of Somali and Ethiopian soldiers killed in Burhakaba.

For several months, the transitional government, which is recognized by the international community, has been at war with the Islamic Courts Union over the control of southern Somalia. The Islamist movement, which control Mogadishu and almost two thirds of the provinces, accused Ethiopian troops of fighting alongside the militias of the transitional government.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who earlier this week recognized his country "is technically at war" with the Somali Islamists, has acknowledged sending "about a hundred trainers at the most" to Somalia. He maintains that no troops have been sent, however.

Also the Baidoa-based government denies the many witness accounts of Ethiopian troops in the small territory under its control. The Islamists, on the other hand, have made the most of the possible propaganda gains attributed to Baidoa's alliance with Ethiopia - considered the arch-rival of Somalia. The two countries have fought several wars in the past.

The arrest of the Somali journalists today triggered international protests. RSF called for the immediate release of the journalists, for they "were undesired witnesses of the bloody poker game being played by the belligerents in Somalia. In view of the very worrying situation in which our three colleagues now find themselves, we urge the government to respect the press freedom guarantees contained in the federal transition charter it signed."

Believing the public's right to know the realities of the fighting that is taking place in Somalia, RSF in a statement therefore urged President Abdillahi Yusuf Ahmed to release the journalists who were doing their job in an extremely dangerous situation where news manipulation is one of the weapons being used.

By staff writer

Source: Afrol News


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