See also:
» 25.02.2009 - Appeal court upholds editor’s sentence
» 04.12.2008 - Bail application for Senegalese editor rejected
» 15.09.2008 - Publisher jailed for 3 years
» 03.09.2008 - Police arrest 9 suspects for newspaper raids
» 29.08.2008 - Senegal's anti-press minister fired
» 18.08.2008 - Newspapers ransacked in Senegal
» 26.05.2008 - Another Senegalese journalist slapped with libel
» 16.05.2008 - Senegal journalists' conviction condemned











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Senegal
Media | Politics

French correspondent expelled from Senegal

afrol News, 24 October - Senegalese authorities have refused to lift an 6 October expulsion order against Sophie Malibeaux, Dakar correspondent for 'Radio France Internationale' (RFI), who had interviewed a Casamance rebel. At the time, the order was temporarily reversed, but Ms Malibeaux has again been ordered to leave the country.

Senegalese authorities accused the journalist of threatening public security after RFI aired an interview with a hard-line member of a rebel group from Casamance, a region in southern Senegal. Ms Malibeaux told the US-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) that she plans to leave Senegal today.

RFI said one of its top directors had gone to the Senegalese capital, Dakar, from 20 to 22 October "to convince the Senegalese authorities to reverse their decision to expel Sophie Malibeaux," but that the talks had failed.

The French broadcaster, which can be received throughout Africa, said it "reaffirms its confidence in Sophie Malibeaux and deplores that she is obliged to leave Senegal."

Alain Le Gougec, head of RFI's French Service for Africa, told CPJ that RFI would keep its Dakar office open, but that it was out of the question to replace Malibeaux 2in the operating conditions that the authorities seem to be imposing on us."

Senegalese security agents had detained Ms Malibeaux on 7 October in Ziguinchor, the capital of the troubled Casamance province, and flew her under military escort to Dakar. There, she was served with an expulsion order and told to leave the country immediately.

Ms Malibeaux had been covering a congress of Casamance rebel groups in Ziguinchor aimed at preparing peace talks with the government. Before the gathering started, RFI had aired an interview with Alexandre Djiba, a member of the Casamance rebel movement who had boycotted the meeting.

RFI management protested from Paris and negotiated with Senegalese authorities to suspend the order pending further discussions, according to sources at RFI. On the evening of 7 October, Ms Malibeaux was at Dakar airport preparing to leave the country when she was informed that the authorities had reversed the decision to expel her immediately.

- This action undermines Senegal's reputation as a democratic example in the region and calls into question President Abdoulaye Wade's commitment to press freedom, commented CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper in a statement yesterday.

The CPJ leader added that her organisation called on President Wade and the Senegalese government "to lift this expulsion order immediately and to allow journalists to work freely." The group had been "disturbed" by the expulsion.


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