IFEX
27 April 2015
Reporters Without Borders
This statement was originally published on rsf.org on 27 April 2015.
Journalists are being harassed and radio stations prevented from
broadcasting as the authorities clamp down on the media in an attempt to
contain protests in the wake of Saturday's announcement that President
Pierre Nkurunziza is to run for a third term.
The protests continued today after at least two people were killed
in the clashes that erupted yesterday in the capital, Bujumbura.
According to the latest information available, Radio Publique
Africaine (RPA), Burundi's most popular privately-owned radio station,
was closed today. “Let them close the radio station as long as they
don't kill anyone and don't steal our equipment,” the station's
director, Bob Rugurika, said.
Yesterday morning, RPA was forced to suspend live coverage of the
protests when three government ministers and police officers arrived
with search and arrest warrants.
They accused RPA of inciting an uprising by providing live coverage
of the protests and threatened to close the station. Interior minister
Edouard Nduwimana said he and his colleagues had not come to close the
station, just to dialogue, Radio France Internationale reported.
This morning the police raided the Maison de la Presse (Press Club)
in Bujumbura and forced the Media Synergy Studio to stop broadcasting.
The Media Synergy Studio is an alliance under which five radio stations –
RPA, Bonesha FM, Isanganiro, CCIB FM+ and Radio Télevision Renaissance –
are cooperating in their coverage of elections and other subjects.
“Five radio stations were in the process of broadcasting in synergy
from the Burundian Association of Radio Broadcasters when the police
arrived, roughed up journalists and closed down the studio and the Press
Club,” Bonesha FM director Patrick Nduwimana told Reporters Without
Borders.
During the raid, the police tried to arrest the president of the
Burundian Association of Journalists (UBJ), Alexandre Niyungeko. They
also roughed up and briefly detained Pierre Claver Mbonimpa, the
well-known president of the Association for the Protection of Human
Rights and Detainees (APRODH), who had arrived for an interview.
“We condemn the Burundian government's arbitrary and violent
behaviour towards journalists and media outlets,” said Cléa Kahn-Sriber,
the head of the Reporters Without Borders Africa desk.
“The president and his party are openly displaying a desire to
silence the media by all means possible. By gagging radio stations,
President Nkurunziza is confirming the suspicions of his detractors, who
accuse him of despotic tendencies and of planning to block a democratic
outcome to the upcoming legislative and presidential elections.”
So far the United States is the only country to have voiced concern
about what has happened to RPA and other independent radio stations.
Kahn-Sriber added: “We urge the international community to react
quickly and firmly to these draconian attacks on media freedom. With
elections due in many other African countries, turning a blind eye to
President Nkurunziza's behaviour would give a green light to all the
other governments that might be tempted to suppress the free expression
of their peoples.”
Yesterday, the authorities disconnected the relay transmitters of
Burundi's three leading independent radio stations – RPA, Bonesha FM and
Isanganiro – thereby prevented their broadcasts from reaching the rest
of the country. Their phone lines were also disconnected.
According to the Media Synergy alliance, the ruling CNDD-FDD party
circulated a propaganda paper in February that called for the
destruction of the “teachings of the government's enemies” and included
opposition parties, civil society actors and journalists with Bonesha
FM, RPA, Isanganiro and Radio Télévision Renaissance among the
“government's enemies.”
Burundi is ranked 145th out of 180 countries in the 2015 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.