New
York, April 4, 2018--Authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo
should immediately release Eliezer Ntambwe, a journalist and presenter
at the privately owned news outlet and YouTube channel Tokomi Wapi, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
Congolese judicial police on the morning of April 2 arrested Ntambwe at Tokomi Wapi's
Kinshasa office and took him to the prosecutor general's office in
Gombe, a district in the city's northwest, where he is still being held,
according to the journalist's lawyer, Hervé Diakiese, and the Observatory for Press Freedom in Africa, (OLPA), a local press freedom organization. Ntambwe has not been charged, Diakiese said.
Ntambwe
was detained after the governor of DRC's central Kasai Oriental
province, Ngoyi Kasanji, accused him of defamation and extortion
relating to an interview the journalist conducted, according to Diakiese
and OLPA.
"No
journalist should be deprived of his liberty simply on accusations by a
powerful political figure, and before the facts of the case have been
made clear," said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Angela Quintal.
"Eliezer Ntambwe should be freed while due process of the law is carried
out."
Kasanji
told CPJ that Ntambwe's detention was fair because the prosecutor
general was still investigating accusations he made against the
journalist.
Diakiese
said the investigation could be carried out without arresting the
journalist. The lawyer told CPJ that he had submitted a legal request
for Ntambwe's release.
Diakiese
also said Congolese criminal procedure grants the prosecutor general up
to five days from Ntambwe's arrest to investigate the claims. After
five days, the prosecutor may ask a judge to keep Ntambwe in preventive
detention for an additional 15 days, Diakiese told CPJ.
The
governor told CPJ that Ntambwe sought to extort him and threatened to
release a March 8 interview Ntambwe conducted with two guests for Tokomi Wapi during which the governor was accused of involvement in violently seizing a diamond from a miner.
"He [Ntambwe] asked for money [to not broadcast the interview]," Kasanji told CPJ and said he refused to pay.
Diakiese
and two other Congolese journalists with whom CPJ spoke who did not
want to be named for fear of reprisal said they believe Ntambwe's arrest
was meant to intimidate the press.
Following
Ntambwe's arrest, Congolese journalists gathered outside the public
prosecutor's offices calling for their colleague's freedom. Over the last year, journalists in the DRC have been repeatedly detained and harassed, according to CPJ research.
DRC journalist Eliezer Ntambwe detained without charge
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, April 05, 2018
Rating:
No comments: