Loading...
Four media workers kidnapped in Somalia
27 August 08

Release by the Committee to Protect Journalists - The Committee to Protect Journalists is deeply concerned about the safety of three journalists and their driver who were abducted by an unknown armed group two days ago.

Somali photojournalist Abdifatah Mohamed Elmi and two foreign freelance journalists, Canadian Amanda Lindhout and Australian Nigel Brennan, along with a driver identified only as Mahad, were kidnapped along the Afgoye-Mogadishu Road, roughly 11 miles (17 kilometers) north of the capital, Mogadishu, local journalists told CPJ.

The National Union of Somali Journalists said they believed the abducted group was being held in the northeastern village of Suqa Holaha on August 24 but local journalists and a relative of Elmi received a tip that they have moved since to Jowhar, a town 50 miles (90 kilometers) north of Mogadishu.

The reasons for the abduction are still unclear. Local journalists told CPJ that it appeared to have been to be a well-planned operation using three vehicles.

"Somalia continues to be the most dangerous place for local and foreign journalists in Africa,"said CPJ’s Africa Program Coordinator, Tom Rhodes. "CPJ calls on both the Transitional Government and the Islamic Courts Union to adhere to their public statements to do everything possible to ensure the safe release of these media workers."

According to local reports, Mogadishu’s interim mayor, Mohamed Osman Ali, condemned the abduction and is investigating. Government military spokesman Dahir Mohamed claimed that suspected members of the insurgent Islamic Courts Union "a coalition of Islamic courts fighting the transitional government" that make up the Lower Shabelle Administration are behind the kidnapping, local journalists said. The transitional government and the Islamic Courts Union have been fighting a civil war since December 2006, when the current government wrested power from the Islamic Union. The union’s spokesman, Sheikh Abdirahim Isse Adow, told Reuters that they were not behind the abduction and would "do all that is possible to save them."

According to HornAfrik journalist Abdullahi Hasan Suleiman, the three were abducted upon their return visit from a refugee camp in Celasha Biyaha, roughly 12 miles (20 kilometers) north of Mogadishu.

In a separate incident the previous day, police arrested journalist Ahmed Jeylani of Radio Voice of Holy Koran in the Bondhere district of Mogadishu. Police detained the journalist overnight without charges and released him without stating the reason behind his arrest, the National Union of Somali Journalists told CPJ.

The violence in Somalia has taken a heavy toll on journalists: Seven Somali journalists were killed because of their work in 2007, the world’s second-highest count behind Iraq. More than 50 others have fled Mogadishu, according to CPJ research. Two were killed earlier this year in separate incidents.

New York, August 25, 2008

 

Comment

Forum registration required

Prior to reacting to this article, you must register. Thank you for entering the personal identifier supplied to you. If you are not already registered, you must register.

Personal identifiers


[register] [password forgotten?]

 
More articles about same themes ? Use advanced search
--------

How Child Friendly Is Africa 21.11

Congo: Human rights groups request special session of Human Rights Council 17.11

Zimbabwean Women Have Had ‘‘More Trauma’’ After Independence 17.11

DRC: Recruitment of child soldiers rising 13.11

African Commission probes Nigeria’s human rights records 10.11

--------

IRAQ: NGOs concerned about detainees’ rights 18.11

Blackwater Busted? 17.11

Rights watchdog criticises Geneva police 14.11

DRC: Recruitment of child soldiers rising 13.11

Military accused of crimes against humanity in Burma 10.11

--------

Blackwater Busted? 17.11

Rights lawyers file Spanish court case on El Salvador killings 14.11

Web Watcher: Universal Declaration of Human Rights 60th anniversary 12.11

Rights bodies urge help be given to 50 Guantanamo detainees 11.11

African Commission probes Nigeria’s human rights records 10.11

--------

Zimbabwean Women Have Had ‘‘More Trauma’’ After Independence 17.11

The Omar Khadr case: Redefining war crimes 10.11

-------- --------

Congo: Human rights groups request special session of Human Rights Council 17.11

2,000 Women’s rights activists gather in Cape Town for world’s largerst triennal forum on women in development 12.11

Charters  |  About us  |  www.humanrights-geneva.info  |  Editorial teams  |  Web Editor: Michel Bührer
designed by vocables.com with Spip
sommaire prix nicolas bouvier le temps geopolitis tsr.ch swissinfo rue 89 ipsnews infosud