Radio Shabelle editor targeted by information minister
Organisation:
Reporters Without Borders is very worried by the summons that Abdi Mohamed Ismail, a radio journalist also known as Abdi Uud, has received from information minister Abdullahi Ilmooge Hersi.
The summons was issued following a news conference yesterday in which the minister threatened news media opposed to a proposed law for regulating the press, which the cabinet unveiled on 11 June. The minister accused the bill’s media critics of having foreign interests.
The editor of Radio Shabelle, a station that is part of the Shabelle Media Network, Ismail said he would not respond to the summons to report to the information ministry because he feared arrest. His refusal could nonetheless result in his being arrested.
He told Reporters Without Borders: “The language used by the information minister is the same as that used by members of the Al-Shabaab militia to justify attacking and intimidating the media in Somalia.”
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17.07.2013 - Confidentiality of sources would end under proposed new law
Reporters Without Borders is very worried by the grave threat to media freedom and media pluralism posed by a bill that the Somali cabinet approved on 11 July and, if adopted by parliament, would replace the 2007 media law.
Its provisions include giving the courts the power to order journalists to reveal their sources – a flagrant violation of freedom of information.
“By approving this bill, the cabinet has betrayed its contempt for journalists and the basic principles of media freedom,” Reporters Without Borders said. “In what is already one of the world’s most dangerous countries for the media, the self-censorship resulting from a lack of protection for sources would reduce reporters to near silence.
Reporters Without Borders added: “We urge Somalia’s parliament to defend freedom of information by rejecting this draconian legislation without delay.”
The proposed law would provide a legal basis for the strong pressure that the Somali authorities already apply to both local and foreign media on security grounds.
One of the main sources of concern is the vague wording used in connection with media offences. The law would also undermine the independence of the National Media Council, which regulates the media.
National Union of Somali Journalists secretary-general Omar Faruk Osman said: “If left unchanged and passed by the federal parliament, the draft law would seriously restrict media pluralism, curb the independence of the press and impose a chilling effect on the freedom of expression and public debate, all essential for democracy.”
Its approval by the cabinet came just eight days after two journalists in the northwestern region of Somaliland – Hassan Hussein Abdullahi, the editor of the Hargeisa-based daily Hubaal, and Mohamed Ahmed Jama, the newspaper’s manager – were given jail sentences and heavy fines on libel charges.
Violence continues to threaten the work of journalists. TV reporter Liban Abdullahi Farah was gunned down as he was returning to his home in the north-central city of Galkayo on 7 July.
Photograph: Somali minister of information, Abdullahi Ilmooge Hersi (Mohamed Abdiwahab / AFP)
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016