“While I’m speaking, many homes of Tunisian journalists are completely surrounded,”
, one of four recipients of the 2009 International Press Freedom Awards, told reporters at the National Press Club today, describing state surveillance. The Committee to Protect Journalists gives the awards each year to courageous journalists working in dangerous and repressive circumstances.
At today’s press conference, CPJ also introduced awardee
Mustafa
Haji Abdinur, an Agence France-Presse correspondent and editor-in-chief of Radio
Simba in
Somalia.
Two other CPJ awardees,
J.S.
Tissainayagam of
Sri Lanka
and
Eynulla
Fatullayev of Azerbaijan,
were recognized but not present: They are imprisoned in their home countries in
retaliation for their work.
The awards be officially bestowed on Tuesday in New York; the awardees are in Washington to meet with elected officials,
diplomats, and news media.
Abdinur noted the dangers facing the press in Somalia, where
18 journalists have died on duty since 2005. “If a journalist is killed, the
news is also killed,” he said, noting that foreign journalists are no longer
stationed in the country and domestic reporters are being attacked, killed, or
forced into exile. Few reporters are left, and the world knows ever less about
the grave crisis there.
CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon
called for the release of the imprisoned journalists Tissainayagam and Fatullayev.
“We will make sure their respective governments are aware of our outrage,” he
said.
Fatullayev is an
investigative journalist whose colleague, editor Elmar Huseynov, was
assassinated in 2005. Fatullayev is serving more than eight years on fabricated
charges after his reporting on the unsolved Huseynov slaying raised questions
about government obstruction.
“His only crime is his journalism,” said Nina Ognianova, CPJ’s Europe and Central
Asia program coordinator. “He is being punished for doing a job
that the government has not done: investigating the murder of his editor.”
Tissainayagam, or Tissa as he is known in Sri Lanka, is
serving 20 years in prison on terrorism charges based on his journalism.
Tissainayagam had written columns documenting human rights and other abuses by
Sri Lankan military authorities. The government called it inciting “communal
disharmony.
Bob Dietz, CPJ’s Asia
program coordinator, called on Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa to
intervene in the case, rectify a miscarriage of justice, and set Tissainayagam
free.
For more information about the
awardees and the awards ceremony, which will be held at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York on Tuesday, November
24, please visit CPJ’s Web site. At the ceremony,
CPJ will also honor the author and former New
York Times columnist Anthony Lewis. Lewis, a founding board member of CPJ,
will be presented the Burton Benjamin Memorial Award for lifetime achievement.