New
York, February 9, 2007— The Committee to Protect Journalists
deplores the reported death of prominent, award-winning journalist
Fesshaye Yohannes, imprisoned without charges in September 2001, along
with the majority of Eritrea’s independent press corps.
Yohannes,
founding editor of the defunct weekly Setit and a recipient of
CPJ’s International Press Freedom Award in 2002, died in a prison
outside the capital Asmara, several sources have told CPJ. Repeated
attempts by CPJ to reach Eritrean government officials in Asmara were
unsuccessful. Officials at the Eritrean embassy in Washington, D.C., did
not return messages seeking comment, but Voice of America quoted
Eritrean presidential spokesman Yemane Gebremeskel as denying the
reports. “In the first place, I don’t know the person you’re talking
about,” he said.
“Reports that our colleague Joshua Yohannes has
died in government custody fill us with sadness and anger: sadness
because Eritrea may have lost a brave journalist and anger because
government officials who may be responsible for his death are denying
that they ever heard of him,” said Joel Simon, CPJ Executive
Director.
While some reports allege that Yohannes died on January
11 after a long illness in unknown prison conditions, a separate report
alleges that the journalist died nearly four years ago in a prison in
Embatkala, 21 miles (35 km) northeast of Asmara. Yohannes was allegedly
found dead in his cell on December 13, 2002, exiled opposition party
leader Adhanom Gebremariam told CPJ. Gebremariam, who was one of 15
ruling party officials accused of treason after writing a June 2001
public letter urging President Issayas Afewerki to democratize his
regime, said he received this information from sources he still has in
Eritrea.
Fesshaye went by the name of “Joshua” among family and
friends. Formerly a member of the guerrilla movement fighting for
Eritrean independence from neighboring Ethiopia, he turned to journalism
when Eritrea became a state in the early 1990s. He became a popular
writer and Setit grew into the nation’s largest-circulation
newspaper.
Setit’s editor and staff tackled tough issues
in the young nation including poverty, prostitution, and Eritrea’s lack
of infrastructure for handicapped veterans of the 30-year independence
struggle. The weekly’s criticism angered the government, and by May
2001, Fesshaye asked CPJ to help him create a journalists’ union to
improve press freedom conditions.
But Fesshaye and other
journalists never got the chance. The government led by President Isaias
Afwerki launched
a crackdown on all opposition voices including the press in September
2001 just one week after 9/11. Under the pretext of combating
terrorism, the government shut down every independent media outlet and
arrested independent journalists on sight. Fesshaye refused to abandon
his colleagues by going into hiding, sources told CPJ, and he eventually
surrendered to the authorities.
He was 47-years-old when he went
to a jail where he and other imprisoned journalists still had contact
with the outside world. In May 2002, Fesshaye and nine other colleagues
staged a hunger strike in hopes of spurring their release. Instead,
government officials transferred the journalists to an undisclosed
location.
At least 14 other journalists remain held incommunicado
in secret jails, according to CPJ statistics. Another eight journalists,
all working for state media, were detained for at least a few weeks in
November 2006, but an unknown number were released according to CPJ
research. One of the journalists arrested, Ahmed Bhaja, was captured at
the Ethiopian border while attempting to flee the country, according to
CPJ sources. A CPJ study named Eritrea, the only country in sub-Saharan
Africa without a single private media outlet, as one of the ten most
censored countries in the world.
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