Get news alerts Login Central AfricaEast AfricaHorn of AfricaIndian OceanNorth AfricaSouthern AfricaWest AfricaAfrica / World Agriculture - NutritionCulture - ArtsEconomy - DevelopmentEnvironment - NatureGay - LesbianGender - WomenHealthHuman rightsLabourMediaPoliticsScience - EducationSocietyTechnologyTravel - Leisure From Behind By Country By Topic Chronological Press Releases Partner Media Contact Us
ken003 Proposed licensing laws threaten independent media


Kenya
Proposed licensing laws threaten Kenyan independent media

Related items

News articles
» 13.05.2002 - New Kenyan bill "threatens the media" 
» 30.04.2001 - Kenyan minister explains closure of tv/radio station 
» 26.04.2001 - Kenyan private press raided by police 
» 02.08.2000 - Proposed licensing laws threaten Kenyan independent media 
» 28.07.2000 - IMF approves loan for Kenya 
» 11.07.2000 - Kenya: Food situation deteriorating rapidly 

Pages
Kenya Index Page 
News, Africa 

Background
» Kenya's economic and financial performance indicators

In Internet
Comm. to protect Journalists (CPJ) 
CPJ Kenya Page 
The Daily Nation 
IRIN - Kenya
AllAfrica - Kenya 
Kenya Web 

afrol.com, 2 August - A proposed amendments to the Books and Newspapers Act would dramatically increase the mandatory publication-licensing bond. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has expressed its grave concerns.

Under the amended Act, new publications would be required to post a bond of 1 million shillings (US$ 13,459) as security for any monetary penalty that might arise from criminal proceedings against them. This represents a hundred-fold increase over the current bond of ten thousand shillings (US$ 134.59). 

Publishers that failed to post this bond would face fines totaling one million shillings, a three-year jail sentence, or both. Repeat offenders could be jailed for five years and banned permanently from publishing. 

The proposed amendments also hold distributors and vendors of publications responsible for prior violations of the Act. As a result, any person who distributed a publication that had not paid the bond would be "liable for a fine not exceeding twenty thousand shillings (US$2 69) or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or to both," whether or not they were aware that the bond had not been paid. 

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has sent a protest letter to President Moi saying; "We believe that the mandatory licensing-bond requirement in the original Books and Newspapers Act of 1905 violates the freedom of speech guarantees in Section 79 of the Constitution of Kenya. The proposed amendments would make matters worse. We call on Your Excellency's government to replace these archaic colonial statutes with legislation that upholds the Constitution of a modern democratic state." 

Punitive media legislation can only heighten the existing climate of hostility towards the Kenyan press. On June 12, for example, students from the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT) stormed the Nairobi headquarters of the independent Nation media group, stoning the windows and destroying property. 

This act of thuggery was carried out in response to an article titled "Drugs rampant at Kenyan varsity" in that day's issue of the Daily Nation, which alleged extensive drug use at the university campus. According to CPJ's sources, the police failed to prevent the rampage or control the rioting students. 

The same day, Amos Majisu and Vincent Maluti, two journalists from the independent daily newspaper The People, were arrested and questioned over a June 10, 2000, article reporting allegations that police officers in Kakamega district had tried to rape a local woman. Although they were not charged with any offense, the journalists were detained and interrogated for several hours in an attempt to force a retraction, which they refused to do. 

- As a nonpartisan group of journalists dedicated to the promotion of press freedom worldwide, CPJ condemns both state and private violence against journalists, the CPJ letter goes on. 

- We also believe that a state whose officials contribute to establishing an environment hostile to the media is at risk of losing both its credibility and its authority. We therefore call on your government to withdraw the proposed amendments to the Books and Newspapers Act in favor of a legal regime under which all journalists in Kenya may work in an atmosphere free of judicial or physical coercion.

The CPJ urges everybody to join them in protesting this attack on the press by writing a protest letter to:
His Excellency President Daniel arap Moi - Office of the President - Harambee House - Nairobi, Kenya; 
or via fax: 011-254-272-1515 

Source: Committee to Protect Journalists


© afrol.com. Texts and graphics may be reproduced freely, under the condition that their origin is clearly referred to, see Conditions.

   You can contact us at mail@afrol.com