New TV reporter, cameraman and driver held for past eight days in connection with Hariri murder coverage

Reporters Without Borders today condemned the continuing detention of New TV reporter Firas Hatoum, cameraman Abdel-Azim Khayat and driver Mohammed Barbar, who were arrested on 19 December for entering the apartment of a key prosecution witness in the February 2005 murder of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. New TV is a satellite news station based in Beirut. “These three New TV employees pose absolutely no threat and should not have to remain in prison while awaiting the trial,” the press freedom organisation said. “The prosecutor's reaction is utterly disproportionate and suggests that they are the victims of a politically-motivated exploitation of the lack of definition in the legal status of broadcast journalists.” Reporters Without Borders added: “We appeal to the judicial authorities to regard this case as a press offence and to try it under the press law. We also call for the immediate provisional release of the two journalists and their driver, who have already spent more than a week in a detention.” The cases stems from a report that Hatoum and Khayat did on Mohammed Zouheir Siddik, a leading witness in the Hariri murder, in the course of which they went to his apartment in the south Beirut district of Khaldé on 15 December. The apartment was already examined by the international commission of enquiry. Evidence was removed and it has been closed for the past year. Reporters Without Borders has been told there was no sign outside the door saying it was forbidden to enter the apartment. Hatoum and Khayat got Siddik's permission to go to his apartment. Their phone conversation was broadcast on New TV. They went with the building's manager and its security guard, who let them enter through a window as they did not have a key. The manager and guard have also been charged as accomplices. A plain-clothes policeman with the job of keeping the apartment under surveillance watched the two journalists as they filmed it without intervening. It was only after the report was broadcast on 19 December that high court prosecutor Said Mirza ordered the arrest of the three New TV employees, the building manager and the security guard. They have been charged with theft under criminal law, rather than under press law, and face between three and eight years in prison. They are being held in Roumié prison in northeast Beirut.
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Updated on 20.01.2016