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Somali government cracks down on media over security coverage
Issue 281
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Somali First President Die’s At 99

Somaliland Closer To Recognition By Ethiopia

Cholera Outbreak In Somaliland, Up To 70,000 At Risk

Ethiopia PM Makes Landmark Visit To Somalia, Where His Troops Are Protecting The Government

Interview with Mrs. Maryan Ibrahim Abdi, chair of Somaliland Heritage

Ill-Defined Borders Remain To Be Cause Of Conflicts In Africa

Ugandan President Calls For Dialogue Of Warring Parties In Somalia

Somaliland Deserves A Better Treatment

Somali Radio Stations Silenced After Ethiopian PM's Visit

Regional Affairs

Meles Holds Talks With Somaliland President

Bomber strikes near Somali PM’s home

Editorial
Special Report

International News

London student’s jungle war escape led to ‘rendition’ trap

'Swede Dead' After US Strike In Somalia

Former Somaliland Ex-Foreign Affairs Minister Honoured

Astounding Graduate: Ihmad Muhammed, Mentor

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Clan Feuds, Ambitious Warlords And A Nation In Agony

Somali Elders Cry Out For Dhaqanguur

Somali National Movement (SNM)

World's Historic Treasures In Danger Worldwide

Renowned Canadian Scientist on a Short Visit to Amoud University

Anti-Americanism - A Humanitarian Imperative?

Food for thought

Opinions

House Should Reverse Vote Rejecting Two NEC Nominees

Ist: A Person Who Believes Or Practices

Awdalites Should Respect The Rules They Signed!

Somaliland Marches On!

UK “Awdalite Elders” Got It Wrong

In Kuwait: Brave Somalilanders Celebrate 18 May Amid Tough Security Restrictions

What role would Ethiopia/USA play to tackle the Somaliland/Somalia issue?


New York, June 7, 2007—Three private broadcasters covering a government security crackdown in the aftermath of Sunday’s deadly suicide bombing of the residence of the Somali prime minister in the capital, Mogadishu, were indefinitely shuttered on Wednesday after authorities accused the stations of fomenting unrest, according to news reports and local journalists.

HornAfrik Radio, the first independent broadcaster in Somalia’s history, the leading independent station Radio Shabelle, and the private station Radio IQK (Holy Quran Radio) remained off the air today, a day after being shut down by an order of the Somali Information Ministry. HornAfrik Co-Director Ali Sharmarke was briefly detained today and the offices of Shabelle Radio were searched for weapons in the ongoing security crackdown in response to a string of deadly suicide bombings and attacks targeting the Somali government and its Ethiopian allies, according to independent local journalists. Guns carried by the stations’ security personnel were also confiscated, they said.

In an official statement, the Information Ministry accused the broadcasters of “creating insecurity, supporting terrorism, violating freedom of expression, misleading the public and becoming anti-government,” according to Agence France-Presse. The stations were broadcasting interviews of Mogadishu residents affected by house-to-house searches for weapons launched by the authorities this week, according to independent local journalists.

In a separate incident on Monday, authorities in Baidoa, 138 miles (220 kilometers) northwest of Mogadishu, shuttered private Radio Warsan for several hours and questioned Director Abdifatah Mohammed Ibrahim Gesey about the station’s funding, according to local journalists and news reports. The move was in connection with a broadcast alleging the illegal seizure of imported luxury cars by Ethiopian troops in the port of Mogadishu.

“We are disturbed by the unsubstantiated accusations against these radio stations for doing their work, and the censorship of critical coverage.” CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon said. “We call on the Somali transitional government to allow HornAfrik Radio, Radio Shabelle, and Radio IQK back on the air immediately.”

The crackdown has had a chilling impact on the media, resulting in little coverage of the security operations today, local journalists said.

It was the third time this year the transitional government accused broadcasters of fomenting unrest over their coverage of the strife in Mogadishu. The same three stations were already shuttered for a day in January while HornAfrik Radio, Shabelle and private Radio Banadir were warned to censor their coverage in February.

Since ousting an Islamist group from Mogadishu late last year with the backing of Ethiopian troops, the transitional government has been the target of deadly attacks by local militia and Islamist militants. Somalia has had no effective central government since the fall of dictator Siyad Barre in 1991.

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

Source: CPJ


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