By Monica Campbell
Along an isolated stretch of Ethiopian desert, under a gray July
sky, soldiers dragged journalist Martin Schibbye from a truck, stood him up,
raised their Kalashnikovs, and fired. The shots whistled by his head. "I
thought, just get it over with," Schibbye said. "I'd given up."
By that time, he thought his colleague, photojournalist Johan Persson, was
already dead. Soldiers had dragged Persson in a different direction and fired
repeatedly. Those shots turned out to be near-misses as well, intended to
intimidate and instill fear.
Swedish journalists Martin Schibbye, left, and Johan Persson are
released from jail after being held by Ethiopia on terror charges.
(AFP/Jonathan Nackstrand)
The two Swedish
journalists were allowed to live that day, but they were not allowed their
freedom. For more than 400 days, they were jailed in
Addis Ababa, shuttled from solitary cells to rat-infested rooms crowded with
prisoners, some with tuberculosis.
The ordeal ended as the
two journalists, fearing years in prison, finally relented. Yes, we
collaborated with terrorists. That is why we were jailed. Yes, they told Ethiopian state
television, we respect the court. All lies, of course, Schibbye and
Persson said after they were freed in September 2012 on a pardon.
"It was humiliating, but we felt forced to say those things,"
Schibbye told CPJ. "We were still unsure they'd actually let us go."
More than a year earlier,
in June 2011, the two journalists had crossed into eastern Ethiopia from
Somalia and embedded with members of the separatist Ogaden National Liberation
Front, or ONLF. "We'd heard about rapes, executions, and an exodus from
the Ogaden region, and that a Swedish oil company had operations there,"
said Persson, who went to Ethiopia with Schibbye, a freelance writer, to report
a story for the Swedish magazine Filter. "We wanted to go and
see what was happening at the source." Ethiopian security forces seized
the journalists during a raid on the separatist group. But unlike the cases of
other foreign journalists who were expelled for covering issues Ethiopian
authorities wanted to keep secret, the prime minister at the time, Meles
Zenawi, called the
Swedes "messenger boys of a terrorist organization"
and authorized their prosecutionunder
the country's anti-terrorism law. Ethiopian officials forced the journalists at
gunpoint to participate in films re-creating their arrests--cartoonish skits
with civilian actors playing ONLF members and the journalists cast as
accomplices. "It was a circus," Schibbye said, "and we feared
for our lives throughout."
Now, back in Stockholm,
the journalists are troubled most by the six journalists still behind bars in
Ethiopia, including the award-winning editor and blogger Eskinder Nega. "When
we left the cell for the last time, everyone cheered," Schibbye said.
"They said, 'Tell the world about us. Tell them what's happening.'"
CPJ research has tracked a
significant rise in journalist
imprisonments since 2000, a year before the September 11
terrorist attacks on the United States fueled the expansion of anti-terrorism
and national security laws worldwide. The number of journalists jailed
worldwide hit 232 in 2012, 132 of whom were held on anti-terror or other
national security charges. Both are records in the 22 years CPJ has documented
imprisonments. CPJ's analysis has found that governments have exploited these
laws to silence critical journalists covering sensitive issues such as
insurgencies, political opposition parties, and ethnic minorities.
The past decade has seen
waves of mass arrests on such charges, beginning in countries like Eritrea and Cuba and followed more recently in Turkey and Vietnam. The United States helped
legitimize the tactic by imprisoning at least 14 journalists in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Guantánamo Bay throughout the past decade. Although most were
never formally charged, all were broadly accused by U.S. officials of having
committed security or terror-related offenses. U.S. officials never
substantiated any of the allegations.
Throughout the world, CPJ
research has found, the vague wording of national security and terror laws has
allowed the authorities wide latitude to retaliate against reporters covering
sensitive issues. In China,
for example, Article 103 of the penal code criminalizes "undermining the
unity of the country," allowing the prosecution of journalists covering
minorities like Tibetans and Uighurs who have grievances with official
policies. Journalists in China can also be charged under the broad provisions
of Article 105, which states: "Whoever incites others by spreading rumors
or slanders or any other means to subvert the State power or overthrow the
socialist system shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than
five years, criminal detention, public surveillance, or deprivation of
political rights."
In 2009, Ethiopia passed
new anti-terrorism legislation
that includes ambiguous language that could permit a journalist to be jailed
for anything from covering a protest to communicating with banned opposition
groups. It criminalizes coverage of any group the government deems to be
terrorist, a list that includes not only the ONLF separatists but opposition
political parties. Article 6 states: "Whosoever publishes or causes the
publication of a statement that is likely to be understood by some or all of
the members of the public to whom it is published as a direct or indirect
encouragement or other inducement to them to the commission or preparation or
instigation of an act of terrorism ... is punishable with rigorous imprisonment
from 10 to 20 years." A new law on telecommunications also prohibits
"the use of any telecommunications network or apparatus to disseminate any
terrorizing message" or "obscene message," subjecting violations
to a prison penalty of up to eight years.
In Ethiopia, at least 11
reporters have been sentenced to prison terms since the 2009 anti-terrorism law
took effect. One of the best-known cases
involves Eskinder, a journalist who lived in Washington before returning to his
native Ethiopia in the 1990s to start an independent newspaper. Officials have
long targeted Eskinder, shutting his newspapers and jailing him previously on
anti-state charges. His wife, journalist Serkalem Fasil, gave birth to the
couple's son while she was imprisoned several years ago.
The most recent case against
Eskinder stemmed from a 2011 column in which he challenged the government's
claim that imprisoned journalists and activists were actually terrorists.
Officials said that Eskinder's commentary provided "moral support" to
outlawed individuals and groups and charged him with terrorism. After his
arrest, Eskinder was further charged with having links to Ginbot 7, a banned
political party based in the United States, and with receiving weapons from
Eritrea. Eskinder denied the charges, and prosecutors presented no evidence
tying him to arms trafficking or any other terrorist activity. In July, a judge sentenced Eskinder
to 18 years in prison.
"His story is a
powerful symbol of the dramatic repression of freedom of speech in
Ethiopia," said Jason McLure, a former Bloomberg correspondent in Ethiopia
who worked with Eskinder and runs a blog called FreeEskinderNega.com.
"He won't fold, and he's willing to pay a high price for that."
But while the greatest cost is borne by those in prison, the
public suffers as well. In Ethiopia and other nations, CPJ research shows,
national security prosecutions have forced many journalists into silence. One
Ethiopian reporter, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal,
said he was detained on anti-terrorism charges after covering protests by
Muslims opposing government policies seen as curtailing religious freedom.
Fearing he could be swept into a legal vortex, he abandoned reporting on Muslim
activities in the country. "It is very difficult to be a journalist and
exercise the profession without fear of getting charged under the new anti-terrorism
law," he told CPJ.
Iranian authorities also
use national security laws as a club to intimidate journalists,
particularly since the disputed 2009 presidential election. CPJ surveys since
that time have found 40 to 50 journalists imprisoned at any given time, many of
them serving lengthy terms in inhumane conditions. The prosecutions, typically
on charges such as "propagating against the regime" and "acting
against national security," have chilled news coverage within Iran and
driven vulnerable writers and editors into exile. At least 68 Iranian
journalists have fled the country since
2007, CPJ research shows.
Crackdowns often
precede elections or other events that Iranian authorities see as sensitive. In
January 2012, ahead of the country's parliamentary election, police arrestedat
least a half dozen journalists associated with reformist papers. Illustrating
the far-reaching application of national security laws to spread fear, the
authorities detained the well-known writer Marzieh Rasouli, who covered arts
and culture for reformist newspapers but was not known for her political
coverage. She was accused of "acting against national security."
Hadi Ghaemi, director of the New York-based International
Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, said the vague language of the laws allows for
blanket arrests of those seen as political opponents. "And it might get
worse," Ghaemi said. "As international tension over Iran's nuclear
program grows, along with political infighting and next June's presidential
election, the effort to control the press through anti-state laws is set to
increase."
Although local reporters
constitute the majority of those targeted by national security laws, the local
news bureaus of foreign agencies can also be vulnerable. In Iran, the Reuters
news agency saw its accreditation
pulled in October on charges of "propagating against the
regime" after a video report about a martial arts group in Tehran
mistakenly called the participants "assassins." Reuters issued a
correction and clarified that the Tehran bureau chief, Parisa Hafezi, an Iranian,
had not been involved in the editing of the video script. But officials also
pursued a criminal case against Hafezi and, in September, a jury found her
guilty of anti-state charges. The use of anti-state charges against the local
news bureau of an international outlet, Ghaemi said, reflected a disturbing
shift in tactics by Iranian authorities.
China, one of the world's
worst jailers of the press, has used national security laws to enforce
compliance with the views officially approved by the country's propaganda
department. Journalists challenging that authority are at risk. Newspaper
editor Shi Tao,
for example, has been jailed since 2004 for emailing to an overseas news outlet
a propaganda department directive on how to cover the anniversary of the
Tiananmen Square protests. The directive, an unremarkable set of instructions
that called for news media to convey the official stance on Tiananmen, was retroactively
classified a state secret, and Shi was convicted of disclosing information that
harmed national security.
In 2008, Chinese authorities began turning to national security
laws to silence journalists covering marginalized ethnic groups. In December
2012, when CPJ conducted its most recent census of imprisoned journalists, more
than half of the 32 journalists imprisoned in China were Tibetan and Uighur
journalists who had covered ethnic unrest, a topic the central government has
worked hard to suppress. In those cases and others, the authorities typically
filed charges of inciting subversion, subverting state authority, or promoting
disunity; in most of the cases, published articles constituted the primary
evidence. "If you're arrested and charges are filed--if it gets that
far--chances are very good that you'll be convicted," said Victor Clemens,
a San Francisco-based researcher at Chinese Human Rights Defenders, an online
network of human rights activists. "We'll see a blogger [arrested] for
writing about land issues or a religious group and slapped with charges that
are barely defined and for crimes that are rarely even described beyond a few
words. It's ruthless."
In Vietnam, the
authorities have used anti-state charges in an ever-widening
crackdownon critical coverage of
land seizures and the country's relations with China. Online journalists are
heavily targeted:
All but one of the 14 journalists in prison in late 2012 worked on digital
platforms not easily controlled by the state's extensive censorship regime.
"It's more than the mere growth of online media," said Peter
Noorlander, executive director of the London-based Media Legal Defence Initiative, which helps
pay defense costs and trains lawyers in media law worldwide, including Vietnam.
"What we're seeing is increasing nervousness on the part of the government
about threats to its existence." In September, three bloggers who
co-founded the Free Journalists Club, a website that carried stories critical
of Vietnam's relations with China, were sentenced to
prison terms ranging from four to 12 years on anti-state
charges related to their journalism.
Four contributors to the online news outlet Redemptorist
News have been jailed for more than a year, three of them charged
under Article 79 of the penal code with engaging in activities aimed at
overthrowing the government. Redemptorist News, which is run by the
Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, reports on the country's persecuted
Catholic minority, land disputes between the government and grassroots
communities, and other social issues. "We have our own reporters, but we
also publish information from the people if we feel we can say something on
their behalf," Dinh Huu Thoai, a priest who helps edit the site, told CPJ
in a 2012 interview. "We stand for the people who have no voices."
Although the government of
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has won accolades for building the
country's economy and raising its international image, it constrains
journalists from covering the Kurdish issue or addressing other sensitive
political topics. In an extensive August
2012 survey, CPJ found 76 journalists jailed in Turkey, at least 61
in direct relation to their work. Nearly all of those jailed faced national
security-related charges. More than three-quarters of the imprisoned
journalists had yet to be convicted of a crime and were held as they awaited
resolution of their cases.
Of those imprisoned in
Turkey, about two-thirds were Kurdish journalists charged with aiding terrorist
organizations by covering the viewpoints and activities of the banned Kurdistan
Workers Party, or PKK. Nearly all of the other jailed journalists faced
allegations that they took part in anti-government plots or were members of
banned political movements. In a June 2012 letter to CPJ,
Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin justified the criminal prosecution of
journalists, saying that Turkey must balance the protection of free expression
against the need to bar "the praising of violence and terrorist
propaganda." But in numerous cases, CPJ's analysis found, Turkish
authorities conflated the coverage of banned groups and the investigation of
sensitive topics with outright terrorism or other anti-state activity.
"Journalists are not preaching terrorism. They are not
telling their readers to get a bomb and kill," said Mehmet Ali Birand, a
veteran broadcast journalist and columnist in Turkey. "Still, with any
story we do on Kurdish or separatist groups, we face enormous government
pressure to cast them as terrorists. If not, you'll have a minister or top
official that night on television singling you out for not doing enough to help
the country's security forces."
The cases against two
prominent investigative reporters, Nedim Şener and Ahmet Şik,
illustrate the over-reaching nature of the Turkish prosecutions. Both spent
more than 12 months in detention on charges that they aided an anti-government
conspiracy by writing or contributing to books about the influence of the
Islamic Fethullah Gülen movement on Turkish public affairs. The cases, still
pending in late 2012, were filled with irregularities and illogic. The charges,
for example, were based almost entirely on computer documents whose
authenticity has been disputed. Şener said he never contributed to any book
about the Gülen movement, although he has long faced government harassment for
other critical reporting. Most notable is that Turkish authorities have not
fully explained why writing about a group's political influence would
constitute a crime against national security.
International outcry prompted the government to free Şener and
Şık while their cases continued through the court system. "But being
released from jail doesn't mean you are free," said Necati Abay, an
Istanbul-based journalist and spokesman for Turkey's Platform for Solidarity
With Arrested Journalists, a small network that tracks jailed journalists and
coordinates visits and other forms of support for imprisoned journalists.
"The threat is there that you could easily be sent back to jail."
Abay has been arrested several times for his work, including in 2003 when he
was accused of belonging to a banned Marxist group, an allegation he denies. He
said his arrest was just one example of a long official clampdown on the
socialist weekly, Atılım, where Abay has worked as an editor. The government
has closed the paper at times and regularly labeled its staff as dangerous
Marxists.
Press freedom advocates are intensifying their calls on
governments to follow international standards in the application of national
security laws, invoking Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, which guarantees the right to seek, receive, and impart information.
When he was commissioner for human rights for the Council of Europe, Thomas
Hammarberg issued two detailed reports that identified deficiencies in Turkey's
criminal justice system, including its broad definition of terrorism offenses
and the excessive length of its criminal proceedings. Turkey made modest
reforms in 2012, reducing some penalties and altering the system that
adjudicates terrorism cases. But the measure did not fundamentally change the
anti-terror law to rid it of the broad, ambiguous language used to silence
critical news and opinion.
Mats Johansson, a member of Sweden's parliament and the
rapporteur on press freedom for the Council of Europe, found in his own 2012
report that there was deterioration in Turkish democracy that was
"mirrored by a retreat of press freedom." In an interview with CPJ,
Johansson said international pressure requires great persistence. Turkish
politicians, after all, have used his critiques to bolster their own arguments
that foreigners should not meddle in national affairs. "We cannot force
Turkey to reform its laws," Johansson said. "What we can hope for,
however, is incremental change as pressure builds over time. It's very patient
work."
The price of not exerting pressure is enormous. In Ethiopia
today, a reporter told CPJ, "journalists, editors, media owners--they all
censor themselves. Any political news, if it's not liked by the government, can
get a journalist charged with treason." As did many others, he spoke only
on condition of anonymity. He feared government reprisal.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This
article has been modified to reflect the correct name of the Media Legal
Defence Initiative.
Monica Campbell is a San Francisco-based journalist who reports
for Public Radio International's "The World." Campbell has reported
for CPJ from Mexico, Cuba, and Venezuela.
FROM SEBIAWI
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