press releases & Protests
March 24, 2009
His Excellency Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir
President of the Republic of the Sudan
Presidential Palace
Khartoum, Sudan
Your Excellency:
The World Press Freedom Committee (www.wpfc.org) —an umbrella organization
representing 45 press freedom groups from throughout the world— expresses its
profound concern for the fate of Alhaj Warrag, editor-in-chief of Ajras El-Hurriyya
independent newspaper, who was arrested on March 19 and taken into custody as
part of an abusive court procedure.
Ajras El-Hurriyya is one of the very few independent publications in Sudan,
one that has strived to offer different points of view about the country’s most
pressing issues. But this has come at a high cost. Mr. Warrag and his staff have
been subject to frequent harassment and intimidation by government agents, and
their publication has been regularly censored by the authorities. On March 19,
the newspaper had to cancel its print edition because of an article that censors
found too uncomfortable.
In past weeks, Mr. Warrag has been trying to fulfill his judicial obligations
as prescribed by a criminal defamation process that dates back to 2007. After
the pertinent court authorities told him there was no rush to complete the
process, he decided to postpone these bureaucratic procedures. On March 19,
however, after he announced his plans to travel to Germany, he was arrested,
taken to prison and told he will not be released until he fulfills his court
obligations, including the payment of a fine.
Arresting a journalist because of his professional activity is a serious
attack not only on his fundamental human rights, including press freedom, but
also on his audience who thus are deprived of important information about issues
of public interest. By keeping him in prison, you also hold his audience hostage
to an arbitrary decision that threatens fundamental democratic principles.
The harassment and illegal detention of members of the media represent grave
violations of fundamental human rights postulates enshrined not only in the
Sudanese Constitution but also in international covenants, such as the African
Convention on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the United Nations’ Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), of which your country is signatory.
Article 19 of the UDHR states:
Everyone has the right to freedom of expression and opinion; this right
includes the freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive
and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
Your Excellency, your country is still reeling from the dire consequences of
one of the longest, most devastating armed conflicts in Africa’s history.
Sudan’s international reputation is at its all-time low just when the country is
in dire need of foreign aid and assistance to tackle its very grave problems. In
these critical times, a free and independent media that seeks the truth and duly
informs the public constitutes a critical component of any dreams of recovery.
Therefore, we urge you to exercise your executive influence to start the
process that grants the immediate release and exoneration of Mr. Warrag and to
put in place the necessary measures that will allow a free and independent media
to fulfill its duty to keep the public informed in your country.
Respectfully,
E. Markham Bench
Executive Director
World Press Freedom Committee
CC: To the members of the Coordinating Committee of Press Freedom
Organizations:
Committee to Protect Journalists
Inter American Press Association
International Association of Broadcasting
International Federation of the Periodical Press
International Press Institute
North American Broadcasters Association
World Association of Newspapers
World Press Freedom Committee
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