Abuja,
Nigeria, September 12, 2014 -- The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on
authorities in the Congo to apprehend the perpetrators of an attack on
Wednesday against a journalist in his home in Brazzaville. Elie Smith was
threatened and held at gunpoint by unidentified men who he said also attacked
his sister, according to news reports.
Armed
men in plainclothes stormed Smith's home early Wednesday, according to news reports. Smith, a Cameroonian citizen, is a journalist for
pro-government broadcaster MNTV.
In an interview with the Paris-based news
magazine Jeune Afrique, Smith said the assailants told him
they had come to kill him and dispose of his body, and then attacked his
sister. Then they seized his personal belongings and journalistic equipment and
fled, he said.
Smith
added that police had visited his home to document the attack.
Smith
said that sources whom he declined to identify had told him that the attack was
likely in retaliation for a photo he posted on Facebook that he took while
covering a meeting on Monday in which several supporters of the opposition
party were attacked. The photo showed an opposition supporter covered in blood.
MNTV
is one of the few television stations that covers the opposition, according to reports.
Local journalists told CPJ on condition of anonymity that Smith's coverage of
the opposition had created the perception that he was sympathetic to the
opposition, despite the fact that MNTV is a pro-government broadcaster. MNTV is
owned by President Denis Sassou Nguesso's brother.
Smith
said he received threats and that one top police officer had threatened to kill
him. Smith said he would file an official complaint.
CPJ
could not immediately reach the police authorities in Brazzaville. Aides of
Communications Minister Bienvenu Okiémy declined to comment to CPJ.
Political
tension has escalated in recent months in Congo in
connection with alleged plans by Nguesso to revise the country's constitution
to allow him to run for office in 2016, according to reports. Nguesso has ruled his country from 1979 to 1992
and currently since 1997.
"This
gruesome attack on Elie Smith and his family at a time of political tension
sends a disturbing message to the journalism community," said Peter
Nkanga, CPJ's West Africa Representative. "Authorities must launch a
timely and thorough investigation into the attack and bring the perpetrators to
justice."
Source: www.cpj.org
CPJ is an
independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom
worldwide.
Contact:
Sue Valentine
Africa Program
Coordinator
Peter Nkanga
West Africa
Representative
Email: pnkanga@cpj.org
Tom Rhodes
East Africa
Representative
Email: trhodes@cpj.org

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