Press Freedom Abuses Continue Under New Kabila

June 22, 2001

H. E. Joseph Kabila
President of the Democratic Republic of Congo
Ngaliema, Kinshasa
Democratic Republic of Congo
Fax: 011-234-88-02120 / 1-202-234-2609

Your Excellency:

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply concerned about your government’s continued persecution of independent journalists and news outlets. We first protested your administration’s heavy-handed treatment of our colleagues in an April 10 letter. Since then, conditions for Congolese journalists have only worsened.

Most recently, on June 14, agents from the National Information Agency (ANR), a state investigative unit, arrested Joachim Diana Gikupa, publication director for the Kinshasa daily L’Avenir. According to Gikupa’s colleagues, ANR agents called the paper’s office to invite Gikupa to a “press consultation.” The journalist left his office soon after to meet the ANR agents at their headquarters in downtown Kinshasa.

On Friday, June 15, the ANR confirmed that Gikupa was in its custody. ANR officials linked the detention to a June 8 article in which Gikupa reported that some of Your Excellency’s advisers had prevented a prominent member of the late President Mobutu Sese Seko’s regime from holding a press conference. The source for this information was a handwritten letter signed by Professor Théophile Bemba Fundu, Your Excellency’s cabinet director, which L’Avenir published along with the article.

In the letter, which carried the letterhead of Your Excellency’s office, the author asks the addressee (identified only as “Dear Mr. Administrator) to ensure that the meeting did not take place “as it risks causing a further drop in the head of state’s political standing.” ANR agents claim the letter is a forgery.

Gikupa was released on June 22, according to sources in Kinshasa. His unfair detention, however, was only the latest in a long series of press freedom abuses by DRC government since you became president six months ago. The following cases are based on information provided by Congolese journalists and confirmed by CPJ:

In total, CPJ has documented some two dozen cases of press freedom abuses in the DRC since Your Excellency took power just six months ago. The sheer volume of incidents belies your frequent public pledges to engage civil society in bringing peace to the war-torn country.
As an organization of journalists devoted to the defense of press freedom around the world, CPJ urges you to ensure the immediate and unconditional release of André Ipakala and Valère Bisweko, who have been jailed simply for reporting facts about life in the DRC today. We also call on you to ensure that Congolese security forces cease harassing journalists in reprisal for their work.

We thank you for your attention to these important matters, and await your comments.

Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director
 

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