Arrests of two journalists are latest in series of press attacks

July 30, 2002


His Excellency Joseph Kabila
President of the Democratic Republic of Congo
Ngaliema, Kinshasa
Democratic Republic of Congo
Via facsimile: 011-234-88-02120 / 1-202-234-2609


Your Excellency:

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is gravely concerned about the imprisonment of Raymond Kabala and Delly Bonsange, publication director and publisher, respectively, of the independent Kinshasa daily, Alerte Plus. Both journalists have now been in prison for more than a week.

Kabala was arrested by plainclothes police early in the morning on July 19 and was detained at the provincial police department. The following day, he was taken to Kinshasa’s Penitentiary and Reeducation Center (CPRK), where he has been held ever since.

According to local sources, Kabala’s arrest stems from a July 11 Alerte Plus article reporting that Minister of Public Order and Security Mwenze Kongolo had allegedly been poisoned. The newspaper learned that the information contained in the article was untrue, and that the minister had merely been out of the country at the time. Alerte Plus published a correction in its July 12 edition.

According to the local press freedom group Journaliste En Danger (JED), Kabala claims that authorities have repeatedly questioned him about his sources and tortured him on a daily basis during his detention.

On the afternoon of July 22, officers of the Kinshasa/Matete Appeals Court Prosecutor’s Office arrested Bonsange. He was questioned about the same July 11 Alerte Plus article and was later transferred to the CPRK, where he also has been held since his arrest.

The incarceration of Kabala and Bonsange follows a series of alarming attacks on press freedom in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

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