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In Somalia, Reporter Held Incommunicado Since Friday

ISSUE 269
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Eighteen butchers get six months in prison for demonstrating against Mayor Ji'ir

Swedish Gov’t To Treat Somaliland As Self-Governing Entity

African Press Needs Help Against Oppression

Arab League To End Somaliland’s Isolation

Candle Light Vigil For Eight Remaining Ethiopian Captives, Free Europeans Leave For Britain

Should The World Legitimize The Independence Of Somaliland?

Accidental Blast Kills 9 Near Mogadishu - Police

Another Journalist Arrested In Hargeysa

"We would not cross swords on this": PM Meles

Mission Report on the Trial Observation of Detained Human Rights Defenders
in Somaliland

Regional Affairs

U.S. Citizen Jailed By Ethiopians

Up To 40,000 Civilians Flee Mogadishu

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Iran to Sell Oil in euros and other currencies

The liberal war on democracy

Greek coast guard finds further bodies after refugee boat tragedy

Why is the US press silent on Brzezinski’s warnings of war against Iran?

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed: The Official Legend of 9/11 is a Fabricated Setup

Murder of Human Rights Activists Prompts UN Condemnation

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somalia: Back to perpetual war

PRECIS: OBSTACLES TO PEACE IN SOMALIA

Smoldering In Somalia

Somalia - James Swan To The Baltimore CFR

Oromo Manifestations challenge Abyssinian Dictator Meles Zenawiy

Food for thought

Opinions

BBC Somali Section Head – Yusuf Garad Is The Remaining Warlord

Mr. President, Back Off From Your Self-Defeating Mission: And Reform Your Leadership and Administration

Dear Mr. President: Please Release My Father!

Somaliland Needs Salvation, What Should Be Done To Save It?

Progress in Somalia: A Myth or Reality?

If Ghana Dares To Recognize Somaliland, Will Southern Politician Scream?

What A Nightmare Scenario!

Petition For Impeachment Of Dahir Rayale Kahin


New York, March 14, 2007—A reporter for a leading broadcaster in the capital Mogadishu, has been jailed incommunicado since Friday by Somalia’s Ethiopian-backed transitional government while reporting on a story, local journalists told CPJ.

Hassan Sade Dhaqane of private HornAfrik radio, the country’s first independent broadcaster, was arrested by three security agents while reporting on a security operation by peacekeeping Ugandan troops near Mogadishu’s airport, HornAfrik Co-manager Ali Iman Sharmake told CPJ. Dozens of people have been killed during increasing insurgent attacks against government forces, Ethiopian troops and a newly-deployed African Union force of 1,200 Ugandan soldiers, according to international news reports. The reason for Dhaqane’s arrest remains unknown, according to local journalists.

“The detention of Hassan Sade Dhaqane without charge and without access to a lawyer violates the basic right to due process enshrined in Somalia's Transitional Federal Charter,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “We call on the authorities to either explain why they are holding Dhaqane or release him immediately.”

On the day of his arrest, Dhaqane had informed the station by phone he was being held at a police station near Mogadishu’s seaport, but he was since moved to a prison in the city, Sharmake said.

Dhaqane was among several journalists attacked this week while covering the security situation in Mogadishu. On Monday, reporters Ismail Ali Abdi, Mohammed Ibrahim Raggeh and Mohammed Ibrahim Ali “Ruush” of private Radio Shabelle were attacked by Ethiopian troops while reporting on a story at a government building, according to senior producer Mohammed Abdi Afgoye and the National Union of Somali Journalists. The attack came a day after another Shabelle reporter, Abdirahman Yusuf “Al-Adala,” was beaten by government forces while reporting on the plight of residents fleeing the violence in Mogadishu, Afgoye told CPJ.

On February 19, the transitional government had already ordered three private stations to censor their reporting on government military operations and the flight of civilians from the capital.

CPJ is a New York–based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit www.cpj.org.   

Source: Committee to Protect Journalists


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