Police in Khartoum, who had detained numerous protesters, also deleted photographs from the cameras of several journalists who were waiting in front of a police station for the release of detainees, according to a local journalist, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.
"We condemn the Sudanese authorities'
attempt to suppress news by harassing reporters and erasing photographs," said
Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ's Middle East and North Africa program coordinator. "We
call on the government to prosecute the officers involved and return James Copnall's
equipment immediately."
The protests were sparked by a YouTube video showing a police officer flogging
a woman. The organizers drafted a memorandum addressed to Minister of Justice
Mohamed Bushra Dosa calling on him to amend Sudanese laws that discriminate
against women, according to the African Center for Justice and Peace Studies, a
nongovernmental organization devoted to promoting human rights in Sudan.
Copnall, BBC's Khartoum correspondent, wrote on
the BBC website that after he took out his microphone and
recording equipment a group of plainclothes men "who were clearly from a branch
of the security forces" surrounded him. "One grabbed my arm," he wrote. "Another
gripped the microphone, trying to wrench it from my grasp. 'I'm a journalist,'
I said. 'I have a right to record this.' But a third man, wiry, tough, with a
moustache, kicked at my legs. The move was so neatly executed, he might have
been a judo champion."

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