Press Freedom Threatened in DRC, Angola, Burundi:

Secretary-General Kofi Annan
United Nations
New York, NY 10017

BY FAX: (212) 963 4879

Dear Mr. Secretary-General,

On the occasion of the United Nations Security Council’s special focus on Africa this month, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) would like to alert you to its concerns over press freedom in Africa, particularly in the three countries for which open briefings will be held—namely the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Angola and Burundi.

CPJ is aware of the importance you attach to freedom of speech, having described it in the past as “the essential vehicle for that exchange of ideas between nations and cultures that is a condition for true understanding and lasting cooperation.” And the assurance you gave, in December 1999, that “if Africans think the world has forgotten them, they should take heart,” gives us confidence that you will share our concerns over the plight of African journalists.

Conflict, in all regions of Africa, continues to be the single biggest threat to journalists and to press freedom itself. Both civil and cross-border wars are effectively used as an excuse by governments (and rebel forces) to harass, intimidate and censor the press—often in the name of “national security”—and in some cases to kill journalists with impunity. CPJ confirmed that in 1999 thirteen journalists were killed in Africa specifically because of their work—ten of them in Sierra Leone and three in Nigeria.

These repressive actions by the governments of the DRC, Angola and Burundi constitute grave violations of journalists’ rights to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds, as guaranteed by Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and Article 9 of the African Charter of Human and People’s Rights, to which all three of these countries are signatories.

CPJ, a non-partisan organization dedicated to the defense of press freedom around the world, urges you to publicly reiterate the commitment of the United Nations to promoting and protecting freedom of speech. As you said in October 1998, “We will have done our part to make possible a global civilization that is defined by . . . its insistence on fundamental, universal human rights – a civilization that is proud to protect Article 19.”

In light of this assurance, we urge you to demand the immediate and unconditional release of the three journalists still detained in the DRC. Furthermore, we ask you to demand of the leaders of all three countries that “national security” never be used as an excuse to imprison, attack or harass journalists; to demand that journalists in the three countries be allowed to report freely on both sides to the conflict without fear of reprisal; to demand that the police, army, security forces, local authorities and government officials stop attacking and harassing journalists; and to demand that the respective governments revise repressive legislation that allows journalists to be imprisoned for so-called “press crimes” such as libel.

We are also writing to each member state of the Security Council, as well as to the leaders of the DRC, Angola and Burundi, with regard to these same issues.

We thank you for your attention to this important matter, and welcome your comments or questions.

Sincerely,


Ann Cooper
Executive Director

END

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