New York, December 29, 2009—A Cameroonian newspaper editor, jailed this
month after publishing a book excerpt that alleged sexual activities by President
Paul Biya, was convicted on
Monday of “insulting the head of state.”
Judge Ibrahim Ba sentenced Jean-Bosco Talla, managing editor of the weekly Germinal, to a one-year suspended term
and a fine of 3.15 million CFA francs (US$6,800), the paper’s editor-in-chief, Duke Atangana
Etotogo, told CPJ. Talla,
who has a week to file an appeal, remained behind bars today at Kondengui
Central Prison in the capital, Yaoundé,
pending payment of the fine, he said.
“We are deeply disappointed by this ruling,” said CPJ
Executive Director Joel Simon. “Democratic
countries are increasingly rejecting criminal penalties for libel, especially
in the case of public figures.”
The
charges stem from Germinal’s publication
of an excerpt from a 2001 book alleging sexual activity between Biya and his
late predecessor Ahmadou
Ahidjo during the transition of power in 1982. The brief item was part of a special package marking the 20th anniversary
of Ahidjo’s death in exile, a date widely covered by the local press. The
controversial allegations and Talla’s arrest sparked a national debate on press
freedom and journalism ethics.
In a December
11 column titled “The Urgency of Regaining Control of the Profession of Journalism,”
Presidential Deputy Chief of Staff Joseph Anderson Le accused Talla of
“undermining the honor and dignity” of the president by publishing irresponsible
“rantings” and “nonsense” from a “defamatory book.” Others, like journalists Jean-Baptiste Ketchateng and Alex Gustave
Azebaze, questioned the legality of Talla’s arrest and his incommunicado
detention at the State Secretariat for Defense.
The government is also imprisoning
Lewis Medjo, editor of the
defunct tabloid La Détente Libre. Medjo is serving a three-year term on
charges of publishing “false news” about a Supreme Court appointment.