New York, July 14, 2004The Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) calls for the immediate release of two
BBC journalists arrested on Sunday, July 11, while reporting in the Bakassi
peninsular, a disputed territory between Cameroon and Nigeria. The BBC
confirmed today that producer Farouk Chothia and reporter Ange Ngu Thomas
are being held under house arrest in Limbe, in southwest Cameroon.
The two journalists arrived in Bakassi on Saturday, July 10, according
to Agence France-Presse (AFP) and CPJ sources. They had received signed
authorization from Cameroon's Communications Minister Jacques Fame Ndongo
to travel to the area but were arrested by Cameroonian soldiers when they
began work on Sunday and then taken to Limbe.
Cameroonian gendarmes who questioned the journalists for two hours yesterday
accused them of spying, according a CPJ source. Soldiers also confiscated
their equipment, identity papers, and authorization to report in Bakassi,
AFP reported. The journalists have not been charged, and in a statement,
the BBC said it is working to get them released.
The BBC statement also confirmed that the two journalists had gone to
Bakassi to cover the handover of the oil-rich area to Cameroon. A 2002
ruling by the International Court of Justice in the Hague awarded the
disputed territory to Cameroon, and Nigerian troops are due to pull out
by September 15. However, Nigerian communities on the peninsular are unhappy
with the ruling.
"Our colleagues Farouk Chothia and Ange Ngu Thomas should be released
immediately," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper. "Journalists should
be allowed to report freely in Bakassi in the run-up to the handover."

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