COMMITTEE TO PROTECT JOURNALISTS
Gambia: Journalist still held despite receiving bail
New York, September 13, 2007 — A prominent radio producer at the Gambia
Radio and Television Services is still being held in jail despite being
granted bail yesterday.
Producer Malick Jones was charged with communicating to an unnamed foreign
journalist sensitive information in violation of state security, a charge
made under the Official Secret Act. Jones, along with government Press
Secretary Mam Sait Ceesay, who was also charged, were granted bail of
200,000 dalasis (US$4,000) each at the Banjul Court on Wednesday. However,
before family members could pay the bail, National Intelligence Agency
security officers entered the courtroom and took Jones and Ceesay into
custody, local journalists reported.
“CPJ calls for the immediate, unconditional release of Malick Jones and Mam
Sait Ceesay,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “Detaining journalists
for doing their jobs, in this case reporting on a newsworthy political
event, violates the basic principles of a free press.”
A court security officer said Jones and Ceesay are still under investigation
and claimed that their release may undermine the investigation.
According to police sources and the Gambian Press Union, Jones is said to
have leaked false information to Ceesay, claiming that the current
government press secretary, Ebrima J. T. Kujabi, will be replaced by Alex de
Costa, the press officer of the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority.
Ceesay, who was the former editor-in-chief of The Daily Observer, then
passed the information on to that publication. Daily Observer reporter Osman
Darboe wrote a front-page story on September 7 titled “Director of Press
Replaced,” stating that Costa would take over Kujabi’s position in the near
future.
The newspaper published a correction three days later confirming that Kujabi
is still the government spokesman. Jones was arrested on September 7 and
Ceesay the following day, reported a police source.
The director of The Daily Observer and close associate to President Yahya
Jammeh, Dr. Saaja Taal, was questioned by the police last Monday, according
to journalists at The Daily Observer.
Both Jones and Ceesay are being held incommunicado at Mile Two Prison in
Banjul.
The Gambia has been listed this year by the the Committee to Protect
Journalists as one of the world’s worst backsliders on press freedom. Heavy
censorship and attacks against the press have escalated in the Gambia since
2004, when editor Deyda Hydara from The Point newspaper was murdered. There
are more than 20 Gambian journalists now living in exile around the world.
CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to
safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit www.cpj.org
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