Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

Somaliland Expels 24 Journalists

Issue 307
Front Page
Index
Headlines

"The Government of Wales Has Selected Somaliland & Lesotho For its
African Link Development"
Harris Nyatsanza, Welsh NGO Officer

U.S. Debating Shift of Support in Somali Conflict

Targeting Of Human Rights Organizations Network And Threats Against Its Director Mubarik Ibrahim Aar

Somaliland Marks World Disability Awareness Day

Somaliland Expels 24 Journalists

Somaliland Foreign Minister Welcomes US State Department’s Fact-Sheet on Somaliland

Recognise Somaliland, analysts tell US

Shifting Policy or a Face-saving Gimmick

US To Reassess Somalia Policy?

Written answers: UK Parliament

Ethiopia says world disinterest dampening Somalia peace hopes

Ethiopia: Situation improving in Somalia- PM

Somalian President’s Illness Raises Fears on Stability

US Urges Somalia To Broaden Political Representation

Regional Affairs

Somali Pastoralists Say Peace Their Priority

Ethiopia, Sudan inaugurate a highway linking to two countries

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Eritrea: Frazer Refutes Bolton's Remarks On Border Issue

World AIDS Day Marks Day of Both Sadness and Hope, Says Bush

Canada Citizen Files lawsuit against Ethiopian government

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Technology is the Root of All Evil

The Horrific Tale of Sonkorey: the tip of the iceberg on the attrocities committed by Ethiopians in Somalia

"Doomsday Seed Vault" in the Arctic

UN: Atrocities Fuel Worsening Crisis in Horn of Africa

USG Visits newly Displaced Somalis from Mogadishu on mission to Afgooye

FACTBOX - Key facts on Somali President Yusuf

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland Private Enterprises Deserve To Become A Role Model For All!

The Forgotten Route

Education in Somaliland

Mohamed Hashi Has The Fame, Rayale Lives In Shame

Kosovo and Somaliland: US Double Standards

My Visit to Hargeisa:

Somalia's crisis made in USA

Puntland Oil and Mineral Development: Benefits and Risks from Socio-economic and Environmental Perspectives


New York, December 5, 2007 - CPJ condemns the Somaliland authorities’ decision to expel 24 Somali journalists from Hargeysa, the capital of the northern breakaway republic. The group had recently fled there to escape ongoing persecution in Mogadishu, Somalia.

Tuesday, Somaliland Police Chief General Mohammed Saqadhi Dubad and the head of the Criminal Investigations Department, General Ahmed Ali Shabel, ordered the 24 exiled journalists to leave Somaliland within 24 hours. Negotiations with Somaliland’s foreign minister and human rights organizations today have allowed the journalists to stay in Hargeysa until Sunday.

“We condemn the decision of the Somaliland authorities to evict these journalists from Hargeysa,” said Executive Director Joel Simon. “If Somaliland wants to be recognized as an autonomous nation by the international community, it needs to adhere to international human rights principles and ensure the safety and protection of these journalists.” Somaliland declared its independence from Somalia in 1991.

Over the past three weeks, a steady flow of journalists fled Mogadishu to Hargeysa, where they stayed together in a safe house set up and supported by local and international media groups, local journalists reported. All of the journalists were forced to flee Mogadishu due to ongoing threats to their lives. Many came to Hargeysa penniless and hungry, said the chairman of the Somaliland Journalists Association, Mustapha Abdi Isse.

According to Somaliland’s presidential spokesman, Si’id Adani Moge, the minister of the interior made the eviction decision, claiming the journalists’ reporting would jeopardize Somaliland’s relationship with Ethiopia. “We are still helping thousands of refugees [from Mogadishu] but we accepted these journalists into our country as refugees, not as practicing journalists,” Adani told CPJ.

Adani claimed the journalists were, during their stay, writing critical reports regarding the Ethiopian forces in Mogadishu that negatively affected Somaliland’s “vital relationship” with Ethiopia. “We don’t want any journalists, including local ones [in Somaliland], to offend the Ethiopian government.” The Transitional Federal Government took control of Mogadishu with military support from neighboring Ethiopia.

Meanwhile, the mayor of Mogadishu, Mohamed “Dheere” Omar Habeeb, reopened three private radio stations in Mogadishu yesterday. The three stations, Radio Banadir, Radio Shabelle, and Radio Simba were forced to halt operations in mid-November by the mayor’s orders for allegedly inciting violence in Mogadishu. Omar also dropped earlier restrictions imposed on journalists in Mogadishu that had banned reporting on “military operations” but urged the stations to produce balanced coverage and rely on accurate sources for their information.

Source: Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)

 


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search