AFP Somalia journalist wins key press award
(New York, Nov
25,
2009 Ceegaag Online)
An AFP journalist who is
among the few independent reporters still working in
war-torn Mogadishu received Tuesday a key press award for
his work, along with three other correspondents.
"By recognizing me, you
are also recognizing the courage of the small band of
working journalists still in Somalia," Mustafa Haji Abdinur
said at the ceremony for the Committee to Protect
Journalists' (CPJ) International Press Freedom Awards.
Noting the dangers
facing his media colleagues in the country, Abdinur -- who
is also editor-in-chief of Somalia's independent Radio Simba
-- said the CPJ was "paying tribute to those reporters who
have made the ultimate sacrifice for their profession."
Six Somali journalists
have died on duty in Somalia this year alone, and 18 have
been killed since 2005.
Foreign journalists are
no longer stationed there and the remaining reporters are
often targeted in this country that has been embroiled in
virtually non-stop civil war since 1991, Abdinur said.
In his speech Abdinur
said he was accepting the award "for all those who put their
lives on the line for our profession everyday, and for those
who have paid for the privilege of being a journalist with
their own blood."
The other recipients
included Naziha Rejiba, editor of independent online news
journal Kalima, which is banned in her home country of
Tunisia.
"I am neither a hero nor
a victim, but a journalist who wishes to work under normal
conditions," she said on accepting her award.
"The degree of
repression in Tunisia is such that it transforms normal
activities into something exceptional."
The other award winners
were absent from the event at New York's Waldorf-Astoria
hotel because their work critical of government repression
had landed them in jail.
They were Eynulla
Fatullayev, editor of Realny Azerbaijan newspaper, and J.S.
Tissainayagam, editor of the news website OutreachSL and a
columnist for the English-language Sri Lankan Sunday Times.
Abdinur, with the help
of a business partner, launched Radio Simba in 2007,
reaching more than two million listeners across southern and
central Somalia.
His work for AFP and
other Western media outlets has made him a target of both
the insurgents and government security forces.
Insurgents beat him
after he assisted Japanese journalists with Kyodo News
agency, and government authorities arrested him for airing
an interview with a leader of hardline Shebab insurgents.
But all this and more --
death threats forced his family to relocate -- did not deter
Abdinur.
"For my entire life --
I'm 27 years old -- there has been no effective central
government in Somalia. It's a failed state. That makes it so
dangerous to be a reporter because there is no police, no
army and no court system to back you up if you get in
trouble," he said.
"That is why, ladies and
gentlemen, your support is so vital to me, and to my
courageous colleagues who every day brave the bullet-scarred
streets to bring you news of our unending civil war."
Fatullayev was detained
in Azerbaijan after investigating the 2005 death of Monitor
magazine editor Elmar Huseynov, a friend and colleague.
Two years later, he
published an article alleging that high-ranking government
authorities had ordered the murder and obstructed the
investigation.
Within days, Fatullayev
received death threats and months later was convicted to an
eight-year term on what the CPJ called "a number of baseless
charges."
Tissainayagam, also
known as Tissa, was taken by the authorities after he went
to the government's Terrorism Investigation Division in
March 2008 to seek information about a colleague who had
been arrested the day before.
Currently serving a
20-year prison term, he was among dozens of ethnic Tamil
journalists who were seized during the 26-year conflict
between the Sinhalese-majority government and Tamil
separatists.
Chinese reporter Jiang
Weiping, who was arrested in December 2000 and sentenced to
a nine-year prison term after penning several articles
exposing government corruption, also accepted a CPJ prize
awarded in 2001, after he was allowed to travel following
his release.
"I was so encouraged by
the prize," Jiang told AFP.
"It supported me
mentally tremendously," said Jiang, former Dalian bureau
chief for the newspaper Wen Hui Bao and reporter for the
state news agency Xinhua.
Also at the ceremony,
former New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis received the
Burton Benjamin Award for his lifetime achievement at the
leading US newspaper.
Sourse: AFP
webmaster@ceegaag.com |