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CÔTE D'IVOIRE
On January 8, President Laurent Gbagbo's government
thwarted an attempted coup by mercenaries whom the ruling Popular Front
(FPI) accused of being in the pay of Burkina Faso and other countries
bordering Côte d'Ivoire.
The rebels occupied the compound of the official
RTI broadcasting network and aired communiqués saying that the
elected government had been overthrown.
Government troops then shelled the RTI compound,
ransacked studios, and destroyed broadcasting equipment. Thirty-one rebels
were arrested after an hour-long shoot-out.
In the wake of the botched coup, authorities launched
a crackdown against former government and Army officials and journalists
perceived to be hostile to the Gbagbo regime. The government particularly
targeted supporters of the opposition Rally of Republicans (RDR), whose
leader, Allassane Ouattara, fled abroad, citing security concerns.
Several local journalists suffered harsh reprisals
for allegedly propagandizing on behalf of the RDR. Police harassed others
for their non-Ivorian descent or for being Muslim northerners in a country
ruled since independence by southern Christians.
On January 13, local newspapers reported that "unidentified
persons" had ransacked the home of Meite Sindou, editor of the pro-RDR
daily Le Patriote. On February 10, police raided the printing press
of Le Jour, an Abidjan daily known for its strongly independent
stance. The officers, who claimed to be acting on an anonymous phone tip,
forced a security guard to lie prone while they searched the premises
for "arms and mercenaries." They found nothing.
And despite President Gbagbo's insistence that "no
journalist [would] be imprisoned" by his administration, Sindou and
four other staffers from Le Patriote were prosecuted for
"inciting people to rebellion" in the wake of the failed January
8 coup.
The incitement charges were later dropped. But on
May 10, Sindou and Le Patriote publisher Patrice Lenonhin became
the first journalists to be convicted of work-related crimes under President
Gbagbo. Charged with defamation for reporting on alleged corruption and
embezzlement at a local nongovernmental organization called the Human
Rights League (LIDHO), both men received suspended three-month jail terms.
The case against Sindou and Le Patriote,
often described more as a feisty political pamphlet than a newspaper,
moved the Press Freedom and Media Ethics Observatory (OLPED), a local
media watchdog group, to urge a public boycott of allegedly "non-credible"
papers.
OLPED issued the statement on May 3, World Press
Freedom Day. Journalists of all political persuasions responded by accusing
OLPED of unethical behavior. However, OLPED's take on Ivorian media ethics
drew strong support from President Gbagbo and Prime Minister Affi N'Guessan.
Speaking to a gathering of media professionals, N'Guessan asserted that
Côte d'Ivoire needed an "appeased media" rather than an "arsonist"
one, claiming that allegedly biased news reports had caused "75 percent"
of the political turmoil leading to the January 8 coup attempt.
In response, local journalists charged that the
government was itself creating instability by bullying the press and keeping
it underdeveloped through outdated laws that criminalize the practice
of journalism.
In a separate incident, widespread xenophobia and
anti-immigrant feelings are believed to have inspired the April 12 suspension
of Solidarité Paalga, a bi-monthly catering to immigrants
from Burkina Faso. The National Press Commission, which banned the paper
for allegedly flouting regulations for the operation of print media, lifted
the suspension order on May 3 following an active protest campaign by
local journalists.
The second half of the year was quieter, as the
government took steps to liberalize the state media. In June, officials
announced the creation of an independent broadcasting authority (private
radio stations were first licensed in 1990). In July, the government solicited
private investment in the state-owned Fraternité Matin newspaper
group.
The government also said that RTI would be streamlined
to make it more competitive with private broadcasters and with the Voice
of America, which in August obtained approval for an FM relay station
in Abidjan.
Meanwhile, the Gbagbo administration released a
number of political detainees and won back the favor of international
lenders. In October, the government initiated reconciliation talks with
opposition parties. The effort succeeded beyond expectations. RDR leader
Ouattara and former president Henri Konan Bedie, who was toppled in a
December 1999 military coup, returned home in late November and resumed
political activities.
January 17
Muhamed Junior Ouattara, Agence France-Presse
IMPRISONED
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reporter Ouattara was arrested by four plainclothes
police officers at the entrance of AFP's office building in dowtown Abidjan,
the capital of Côte d'Ivoire.
Police suspected Ouattara of involvement in a failed January 8 coup
attempt that resulted in the deaths of several people, including two pro-government
soldiers and a dozen rebels.
The officers roughed up several AFP journalists before handcuffing Ouattara
and shoving him into an unmarked car. The award-winning reporter was then
driven to the Abidjan offices of the police counter-espionage unit (DST)
where he was interrogated about phone calls he received from a rebel leader
on the night of the coup.
On 18 January, Ouattara's lawyer was prevented from entering the DST
building, in violation of Côte d'Ivoire's criminal procedure code. AFP
sources in Abidjan said the rebels had called the agency to air their
grievances and later called Ouattara at his home to provide further insight
into their motivation, which they expected the journalist to publish in
an article.
Ouattara was released without charges on January 22. CPJ protested Ouattara's
detention in a February 15 letter to President Laurent Gbagbo.
February 10
Le Jour
ATTACKED
As many as 30 armed men and three uniformed police officers broke into
the printing press that produces the independent Abidjan daily Le Jour.
As a police helicopter hovered over the factory, the intruders forced
a security guard to lie prone while they searched the premises.
The intruders claimed to be law-enforcement officers acting on an anonymous
tip, but they did not have a search warrant, Agence France-Presse reported.
After their 30-minute search failed to produce anything suspicious,
the intruders accused Le Jour administrative director Biamari Coulibaly,
who was not present at the time, of recruiting mercenaries and purchasing
arms in preparation for a coup.
According to the paper's editor, Abdoulaye Sangare, the men threatened
to kill Coulibaly when they found him. They also claimed that pictures
of Coulibaly had been circulated to police stations across the country.
CPJ protested the raid in a February 15 letter to President Laurent
Gbagbo.
May 8
Meite Sindou, Le Patriote
LEGAL ACTION
Patrice Lénonhin, Le Patriote
LEGAL ACTION
Sindou and Lénonhin, editor and publisher, respectively, of the
privately owned opposition daily Le Patriote, were convicted
of criminal defamation and sentenced in absentia to a suspended three-month
jail term and a US$150 fine each.
The sentences followed a complaint filed by Martin Bléou, head
of Côte D'Ivoire's leading human rights group, LIDHO, over a June 2000
report that Bléou had US$155,000 stashed in a Swiss bank account.
Le Patriote alleged that the money was a payoff from the
government of Henri Konan Bedie, who was overthrown in a military coup
in December 1999.
Because the journalists were not present at the hearing, they heard
of the decision through local papers, which are required by law to publicize
any court ruling against the media.
April 12
Solidarité Paalga
CENSORED
The National Press Council (CNP) suspended the publication of Solidarité
Paalga, a bimonthly that caters to immigrants from Burkina Faso. The
CNP said the bimonthly violated Ivoirian press laws because its publisher
was not Ivoirian, had ignored so-called legal deposit requirements, and
employed unaccredited journalists.
The publisher, Nicolas Sahouidi, claimed that he identified himself
as a citizen of Burkina Faso when he applied for a license to publish,
and that the license was granted.
He also said that the paper had complied with the legal deposit requirements,
which compel print publications to deposit three archival copies of each
issue with the CNP.
Sahouidi admitted that no one on his staff was an accredited journalist.
But he argued that under the local press law, an adaptation of France's
1881 Press Code, a journalist is defined as any person who collects and
distributes information and who draws their main source of income from
this occupation.
The CNP lifted the suspension order on May 3, after its members met
with Sahouidi.
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