Communications minister suspends independent news agency
Organisation:
In a letter to President Pierre Buyoya, RSF protested the
private news agency Net Press's suspension. The organisation urged the head
of state to take all necessary measures to ensure that the National
Communications Council (Conseil national de la Communication, CNC) annuls
the decision. "This decision by the minister of communications appears to be
of a completely arbitrary nature. If press law violations were indeed found
to have occurred, we cannot understand why the minister did not alert the
legal authorities," stated Robert Ménard, the organisation's
secretary-general. "Net Press is known in Burundi for its critical stance
towards the authorities. We are led to believe that this is the sole reason
for the suspension," Ménard added. The organisation also requested that
Article 33 of the Press Law be repealed. The article allows the minister of
communications to suspend media outlets "in case of emergency".
According to information collected by RSF, on 14 January 2002, the minister
of communications signed order no. 580/01/2002, indefinitely suspending Net
Press. The agency is being punished because of the "subversive, defamatory,
insulting and deceptive" quality of its publications, which "undermine
national unity, order, security and public morality". The CNC is expected to
either approve or annul the decision during its next working session.
RSF also recalls that Net Press director Jean-Claude Kavumbagu was arrested
and taken to the Bujumbura Criminal Investigation Department's offices on 21
December 2001. He was accused of
insulting the state prosecutor in a press release issued by the electronic
news agency Le Témoin. Yet Kavumbagu does not work for this media outlet. Le
Témoin is an underground agency that distributes information via e-mail. The
persons in charge of the agency remain anonymous. The state prosecutor
ordered Kavumbagu's release seven days later.
Published on
Updated on
20.01.2016