Sudan’s daily raps authorities over seizure of its copies
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August 7, 2011 (NAIROBI) – A Sudanese daily has protested the
confiscation of its copies by the country’s security forces on Sunday,
saying it incurred a heavy financial loss as a result.


A newspaper vendor in Sudan’s capital Khartoum (AFP) In their latest
assault against local press, Sudanese security agents on Sunday
confiscated all copies of the Arabic privately owned daily newspaper
Al-Ahdath as it was getting ready to come out of the printing press.

Sudan frequently confiscates and censors newspapers despite the fact
that the country’s constitution upholds freedom of speech.

Independent and pro-opposition publications in particular continue to
chafe morally and financially under these measures which are often
carried out without any legal framework.

The country’s president Omer Al-Bashir promised in a speech before the
parliament on 12 July that freedoms and rule of law would prevail in
his country’s "second republic" following the secession of South
Sudan.

Ironically, few days later the authorities ordered the closure of
several newspapers on the pretext that their owners are southern
Sudanese.

Mozdalifa Mohamed Osman, head of al-Ahdath’s newsroom, deplored the
seizure as representing "a withdrawal" on the president’s promises of
a new republic characterized by freedoms and rule of law.

She told Sudan Tribune that the confiscation of the paper’s copies was
unexplained and done without legal procedures.

The title’s chief news editor said that if the newspaper had done
anything deserving of punishment, such punishment should have been
carried out in accordance with the law. "Unfortunately the
confiscation was done without reasons," she said.

"The era of confiscations and constraints is supposed to be over," she
added in reference to the president’s claims.

According to Mozdalifa, the paper’s failure to publish had cost it
more than 25,000 Sudanese pounds [approximately 10,000 US dollars].

Al-Ahdath, which started publishing in 2007, was one of ten papers
that suspended publication for one day to protest against the arrest
of journalists who demonstrated against censorship on 18 November
2008.

Sudan’s print-media enjoys relative freedom in compare to
broadcast-media which is tightly controlled by the state.

In September 2009, president Al-Bashir warned newspapers against
publishing any content that crosses "the red-lines" which he defined
in anything "undermining the nation, its sovereignty, security, values
and morality".

International press freedom organizations have in the recent past
criticized the way Sudan curtails freedom of its newspapers and
targets individual journalists through legal proceedings.

Reporters Without Borders, a Paris-based press-freedom watchdog, in
June lamented "the disgraceful way the [Sudanese] authorities are
harassing and prosecuting journalists in Khartoum and the north of the
country in an attempt to silence them and stop embarrassing
revelations about human rights violation by the security forces".

Also in June, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), a New
York-based advocacy group, said that Sudanese authorities continue to
“aggressively” target individual journalists and publications through
"contrived legal proceedings, politicized criminal charges, and
confiscations".

Results published as part of UNESCO 2011 World Press Freedom Day,
Sudan ranks as 40 out of 48 in Sub-Saharan Africa for press freedom.
Amnesty International described Sudan as a place where freedom of
speech is being "openly violated".

(ST)

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