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E. Guinea Suspends Journalist For Mentioning Libya


  1. Solomon Tembang Mforgham

    Equatorial Guinean journalist, Juan Pedro Mendene, working with government-controlled national broadcaster, RTVGE, has been suspended for mentioning the Libyan protest on his programme.

    The US-based Committee to Protect Journalists, CPJ, quotes sources saying on Friday 4 March 2011, Equatorial Guinean Secretary of State for Information and Press, Federico Abaga Ondo, stormed into the studios of RTVGE and ordered producers to kill the microphone of presenter Juan Pedro Mendene, according to local journalists. Ondo then ordered Mendene, who was presenting his weekly hour-long, French-language call-in educational programme "Détente Intégrale," (Total Relaxation) out of the studio, forbidding him to return to the studio.

    CPJ quotes Mendene - who has been nicknamed by listeners "The Guide" because of the educational nature of his show – as saying he mentioned the Libyan revolution in the introduction to his programme.

    According to local journalists, the official took exception to the reference on the grounds that it breached the government-controlled station policy of not discussing on events in Libya, Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Yemen, and Ivory Coast.

    "We condemn the suspension of Juan Pedro Mendene for merely mentioning Libya," said CPJ Africa Advocacy Coordinator, Mohamed Keita. "We call on authorities to lift the suspension immediately, and to end censorship of news from the Middle East and Ivory Coast."

    President Teodoro Obiang's repression of dissent and his iron grip on the media during his 32 years of rule have cowed the Equatorial Guinean press into self-censorship, preventing any probing coverage of ongoing international investigations of the ruling elite over of allegations of siphoning of oil revenue profits, according to CPJ research.



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