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Somali Journalists Targeted

Issue 304
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Puntland Security Forces Defect To Somaliland

Somaliland Government Proposes New ‘Press Law’ To Gag the Free Press & Take its assets.

Town Youths Surrender Deadly Explosives To Somaliland Officials In Las Anod

Interim Qaran Leaders Released After being Held Overnight in Police Custody

Ethiopia Tightening Grip On Somalia — Or Losing It?

Las Anod Local Authority Begins Cleaning The Town

Dubai World Subsidiary Buys Daallo Airlines In Joint Venture With Founders, Djibouti Government

European parliament calls for war crimes probe in Somalia

War without end

President Abdillahi Yusuf Asked To Clarify Government’s Position On Press Freedom

US Africa command will aid security: general

Somalia: an opening towards the end of the impasse

Regional Affairs

Landmine kills 10 in Somaliland

Somaliland: Police Arrest Officials, Supporters Of QARAN Party

Editorial
Special Report

International News

The 'Great Circle of Crisis': Britain's War Plan Against the American System

Farah Roble Aden & Sean Langan Win The Hard News & Features Awards At The 2007 Rory Peck Awards

Lame Ducks, Lame Hawks?

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

An Auschwitz For Africa

Rumsfeld Kept Bogey Of Terror Alive To Rally Americans For War

Challenges To The Modern Commonwealth

Africa: New Improved Disaster Response Tool

EMU, Somaliland University Hope Exchange Program Fosters Peace

Food for thought

Opinions

Open Letter To Somaliland Finance Minister

Freedom Of Press

To save SHURO-Net is to help promote Human Rights in Somaliland

Viva Ali Gulaid

Free Press: An Integral Part Of A Democratic System

The Detention Of QARAN Leaders

Over Seven Ministries And Two Mayors Apologized, But The Minister Of Sports And Youth Still Denies

Somaliland and the press law



MOGADISH , Somalia, Nov. 12, 2007 – Media watchdog groups said Somalia is second only to Iraq in assassinations of journalists with eight killed this year.

The killings have escalated, especially in Mogadishu, since December when invading Ethiopian troops ousted an Islamic movement and installed a U.S.-backed transitional government, The Washington Post reported Monday.

Islamic fighters and tribal militias continue to fight Ethiopian and Somali government troops, with all sides, it seems, dedicated to silencing perceived dissent, the Post reported.

Mahad Ahmed Elmi, who had a talk show on Horn Afriq, was gunned down near the station in August and Tahlil's boss, Ali Iman Sharmarke, the station's co-owner, was killed by a bomb as he returned from Elmi's funeral. Last month, gunmen killed Bashir Nur Gedi, acting director of the network Radio Shabelle.

Said Tahlil, a journalist with Horn Afriq, said the killings have made him a prisoner at work.

"I don't go anywhere," Tahlil told the Post in a telephone interview. "After they killed my boss and my friend, I am scared of everything."

Source: United Press International

 


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