Media in Somalia
Press Freedom vs
Gun Fire
Harassed, beaten, arrested, closed down: Journalists
in Somalia brave some of the most exceptional situations as they are targeted
by all sides of the conflict
By ELIAS ADAM
from
Mogadishu, SOMALIA
The violences against the journalists
have been increasing, and there become a series of brutal attacks on Somali media
in the past few years, in a development that signals a growing pattern of suppression
of freedom of expression in the Horn of Africa country.
Somali journalists
have recently found themselves targeted by physical attacks, arrests, harassment
and robbery perpetrated by all sides in the conflict, even the government institutions
set up to be the guardians of freedom of expression.
Since the collapse
of the former Somali regime in 1991, the local media has been striving to operate
in the most exceptional situations, matched only by a few other places in the
world. Only the print media was operational until the beginning of this decade,
when FM radio stations began to mushroom across the country, reaching millions
of Somalis who did not have access to the print media because of widespread illiteracy.
But
the growth of the media in Somalia has faced strong opposition and continues to
be hampered by concerted efforts to curtail and silence independent voices. In
the country's northwest, the government of the self-proclaimed republic of Somaliland
does not allow the private ownership of radio stations, and independent media
is confined to newspapers whose circulation is limited because of the lower rate
of literacy. Journalists are often arrested and accused of false reporting or
ordered to reveal their sources. Newspaper offices are constantly raided and searched
without warrants.
In the self autonomous region of Puntland in the northeast,
a number of journalists have faced harassment from authorities and some radio
stations have been briefly closed down on repeated occasions for reporting excesses
by security forces. However, both Somaliland and Puntland, which have enjoyed
relative calm, despite all are considerably more respecting of freedom of expression
in comparison with southern Somalia, where the most appalling attacks on the media
took place the last two years in Mogadishu after the transitional federal government,
backed by Ethiopian forces and supported by the US, ousted Islamists late last
year.
No responsibility for killed journalists
This year
alone, seven Mogadishu journalists have been killed, four others shot and wounded
and several detained. Others have faced daily harassment, according to NUSOJ (
National Union of Somali Journalists) report.
In August, 2007, three prominent
journalists were killed: Mahad Ahmed Elmi of Capital Voice radio, shot dead on
11 August; Ali Iman Sharmarke, head of HornAfrik media, killed on the same day
by a car bomb as he was returning from the funeral of a slain colleague.
On
24 August, in the same year, Abdulkadir Mahad Moallin (known as "Kaskey")
of Radio Banadir, was killed as he was returning from a training session in the
south.
No one has claimed responsibility for any of these assassinations,
and there are no official suspects. Somali government officials have promised
protection for the media, but so far this promise has been an empty one. The transitional
government, which has shown its unwillingness to tolerate a free press, has repeatedly
closed down media outlets in Mogadishu and arrested journalists reporting on security
operations by Somali troops - particularly in cases that have seen civilian rights
violated.
Shabelle radio closed down
On 18 September, 2007,
Somali government soldiers raided the offices of the Shabelle Media Network in
Mogadishu, spraying the building with a volley of gunshots, damaging equipment.
Following the raid, 18 staff members were briefly detained and threatened before
being released. Since then, the station has remained closed, with soldiers deployed
around the building.
On a statement posted on Shabelle's website on 20 September
2007, the radio administration expressed disappointment over the incident. "We
are sadly announcing that our media network has ceased all its media activity
after forces from the transitional government of Somalia randomly fired at our
premises in Mogadishu," the statement said.
"The damage caused
by heavy gunfire directed at our premises is immense so we cannot continue operating
our radio station. All the equipment including our main studio has been destroyed
after two and half hours of firing by the government forces."
International
media watchdogs and some governments have voiced their concern for the "new
wave" of attacks on media in Somalia, "the world's second most dangerous
place for journalists after Iraq." In a letter to UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki moon, International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) Secretary General Aidan
White, said, "Mogadishu has experienced the worst press freedom violations,
with journalists facing constant attacks, harassments, libel and intimidation.
"This
has sent a chilling message to the journalist community there that not only will
they not be protected but in fact they will be targeted if they publish investigative
or critical articles. This has led to self-censorship, an exodus of journalists
from their profession and crippled news dissemination. "Despite this crisis
and the constant death threats, detention and arrest that our colleagues in Somalia
face, many of them are continuing to work independently despite the risk to their
personal safety."
The watchdog Reporters Without Borders condemned
the action of the Somali security forces and laid the blamed squarely at the feet
of the transitional government. "The transitional federal government's failure
to take action in these circumstances in incomprehensible", the group said
in a late September statement 2007. "Caught in the crossfire of targeted
killings and arbitrary arrests, Somali journalists have reached a critical threshold
that is threatening the survival of an independent press in Somalia."
The
new UN envoy for Somalia, Ahmedou Ould Abdallah, following his first visit to
the capital said that Somali government leaders had admitted to him in private
that the action taken against Shabelle had been a mistake and would not happen
again.
A US State Department spokesman said Washington was gravely concerned
as the broadcaster had played a vital role in political dialogue and reconciliation.
"We
are gravely concerned about the recent violent attacks on the Shabelle Media Network
in Mogadishu, Somalia, which threatened the lives of Shabelle Media employees
and resulted in the Network's subsequent termination of its radio broadcasts",
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in a statement.
Despite the
support and advocacy by international watchdogs and foreign governments, as Shabelle
radio remains closed and the exodus of journalists increases, the fate of Somali
press freedom is in jeopardy.
As a journalist with a family living in Mogadishu,
working in a situation in which your hoped-for guardian could imprison you or
worse: for asking the wrong question, is frightening at the best of times. And
this nuance to the work takes places against a backdrop of random roadside bombings,
sudden gunfights and stray bullets or mortar shells that target indiscriminately.
This is our reality.
(Published: 12.09.2009.)