In Summary
US ambassador Charles Twining has criticised the
closure, and said he was “alarmed at recent reports of the intimidation
and harassment of journalists in South Sudan by elements within the
government.”
Nairobi Wednesday. Journalists
in war-torn South Sudan are facing growing pressure with reporters
killed or attacked and newspapers closed or threated, the Committee to
Protect Journalists said Wednesday.
Rights groups have repeatedly warned that security
forces have cracked down on journalists, suffocating debate on how to
end a civil war in which tens of thousands have been killed in the past
14 months.
Last month five journalists working for state-run
media were killed in an ambush in the remote western region of Bahr al
Ghazal, along with six other people.
Unknown gunmen carried out the killings, but the
government’s security service has also cracked down on reporters in the
capital Juba.
The Nation Mirror newspaper was shut down by
security agents on February 3, with editor Wol Deng Atak telling the CPJ
the paper was barred from publishing indefinitely because it printed
“anti-government articles.”
The newspaper had sparked anger after a headline
mistakenly claimed government troops had withdrawn from the northern
area of Renk, for which the paper issued an apology and clarified in the
next issue.
US ambassador Charles Twining has criticised the
closure, and said he was “alarmed at recent reports of the intimidation
and harassment of journalists in South Sudan by elements within the
government.”
In January, security forces threatened to shut the
Juba Monitor, forcing the daily newspaper to sack a columnist who said
ethnic divisions were fueling the war.
“The security services conduct these operations without recourse to South Sudanese law,” the CPJ said.
In a separate incident, Nation Mirror reporter
Athiang John was badly beaten by crowds on January 20 in Juba after
trying to investigate a recent attack.
“We call on authorities to allow the Nation Mirror
to resume publishing immediately, and to allow independent media to
freely report the news without fear of censorship or retaliation,” the
CPJ’s Tom Rhodes said.
There was no immediate response from the information ministry.
No comments:
Post a Comment