Ivorian editors fined on charges of offending Gbagbo

On March 31, 2009, in the commercial city of Abidjan, Judge Aissata Koné convicted Op-Ed Editor Nanankoua Gnamenteh  and Managing Editor Eddy Péhé of  private weekly Le Repère  of charges of  "offending the head of state" over an article in early March that was critical of President Laurent Gbagbo, according to local media reports.

Koné sentenced Gnamanteh and Péhé to fines of 20 million CFA francs (US$40,500 dollars) each. Le Repère was also suspended for eight editions.

The judge ordered Gnamanteh released from prison after 14 days in pretrial detention. The jailing appeared to violate the 2004 Ivorian press law, which decriminalized press offenses and banned pretrial detention of journalists. In the ruling, the judge overturned the public prosecutor's determination that Gnamanteh was not a professional journalist and, thus, could be jailed.                

Le Repère Editor-in-Chief Akouala Sinclair told CPJ that the newspaper appealed the sentence. He said the newspaper would publish on its normal schedule and would not pay fines until the appeal was decided.

April 7, 2009 11:18 AM ET |

Text Size
A   A   A
Article Tools

Email Email

Print Print

Share Share

 
 

Video: Lara Logan

Why CPJ matters Join Us

International Press
Freedom Awards

Save the date: Tuesday, November 24. CPJ will honor top global journalists at its 19th annual benefit. Christiane Amanpour hosts.

Anatomy of Injustice

Unsolved murders in Russia
Anatomy of Injustice

Pakistani reporters
face grave risks

CPJ’s Bob Dietz
examines the challenges on the CPJ Blog