Ahmed Abba (Picture: Supplied) |
Cape Town – Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has described the 10-year
sentence of a Cameroonian journalist Ahmed Abba on terrorism-related
charges as "outrageous," says a report.
According to BBC,
Clea Kahn-Sriber from RSF said that Abba, who works for the Hausa
Service of Radio France Internationale, had been given an "utterly
disproportionate sentence, although the prosecution produced no hard
evidence".
"This is a clearly political decision designed to scare
all journalists, especially those who might try to cover the security
situation in northern Cameroon," Kahn-Sriber was quoted as saying.
Abba was arrested in 2015 over his coverage of attacks by Islamist militant group Boko Haram in northern Cameroon.
After nearly two years, a military court convicted him of
non-denunciation of terrorism and laundering the proceeds of terrorist
acts, reports said on Monday.
Cameroon has remained in a protracted battle with Boko Haram since 2014, when the fighters began attacking the government.
Detained for four days
Reports have claimed that Abba and a lot of other journalists were the victims of Cameroon's "war on terror".
According to News24,
three other journalists – Baba Wame, Rodrigue Tongue, and Félix
Cyriaque Ebolé Bola – who were arrested in 2014, are also being
prosecuted in a military tribunal for failing to disclose information
and sources to the government.
The trio were investigating allegations that security forces were
assisting an armed group from the Central African Republic which is
destabilising Cameroon’s eastern region.
In August 2015, Simon
Ateba, a freelance Nigeria-based Cameroonian journalist, was arrested
and detained for four days on accusations of espionage, over his
investigations into the abysmal conditions of refugees in the far north
region
In April 2014, Denis Nkwebo, the president of Cameroon’s press union,
had his car bombed. Nkwebo has received repeated threats for his
reporting on Cameroon’s security forces.
Courtesy:News24
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