Somali
Mayor Ordered to register Media groups and journalists in
Somali.
(AFP) — Media groups and journalists in the Somali capital
were ordered Wednesday to register with authorities or be
barred from the lawless Somali capital, where the
government is battling insurgents.
In the
latest media crackdown, security forces ordered
Mogadishu-based Radio Simba and Radio Banadir off the air
on Tuesday, a day after a similar fate befell Radio
Shabelle.
Media
watchdogs bristled with anger, saying the government has
moved to strangle independent media.
"I call on
media houses and newspapers to register within 30 days in
order to keep working in Mogadishu, otherwise they will
not be allowed to operate," mayor Mohamed Omar Habeb said
in a statement.
The
mayor's office said the order applies to radio stations,
television channels, newspapers and journalists
representing foreign media in the seaside capital, where
Ethiopia-backed Somali forces are battling Islamist
insurgents.
Authorities have accused the independent media of fanning
conflict in the capital, notably interviewing
anti-government elements, broadcasting propaganda and
involvement in insurgency.
Ethiopia,
whose forces are fighting alongside government troops in
Somalia, said Somali media was awash with propaganda.
"Some
local media in Somalia played an unconstructive role
through disseminating unjustified information about
existing realities in Mogadishu to the outside world,"
said Teferi Melesse, a foreign affairs official in Addis
Ababa.
But global
right groups have dismissed the charges and urged
President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed to ensure the safety of
journalists. Eight reporters have been killed in Somalia
this year and dozens arrested, ambushed or robbed.
"Any time
the authorities in Mogadishu hear unwelcome news of the
fighting in the city they send troops crashing through the
door of the radio station responsible," said Joel Simon,
the executive director of the New York-based Committee to
Protect Journalists (CPJ).
"This is
crude and unacceptable censorship. Radio Shabelle, Radio
Banadir and Radio Simba provide a vital service for all
Somalis.
They must be allowed back on air." Said Dahir Alasow
Chairman of Somali Association Journalists
The
Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said the
government was flouting its own regulations and leaving
millions of Somalis in the dark.
So far
this year, Somalia ranks as the second deadliest country
worldwide after Iraq for journalists, according to CPJ.
UN special
envoy to Somalia Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah said it was
"unacceptable" that attacks against journalists went
unpunished and asked Somali authorities to reverse the
registration orders.
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