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    Gambia urged to comply with journo ruling

    It is two years since the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice found that the Gambian government failed to conduct a proper investigation into the murder of journalist Deyda Hydara, as the Media Foundation for West Africa reports.
    Image by 123RF
    Image by 123RF

    Hydara, who was the editor of The Point newspaper, was gunned down in a drive-by shooting by unknown assailants on 16 December 2004 on his way from work. Hydara was also the president of the Gambia Press Union (GPU) and a well-known critic of Gambian President Yahya Jammeh and led advocacy efforts against legislative restrictions on press freedom in The Gambia.

    The State's response to the murder

    After Hydara's murder, the state opened an investigation which was closed in less than a month. No arrests were made and no one was held responsible for the murder. Not only did the state not properly investigate the murder but it also made it a point to restrict and intimidate those who called for proper investigations, MFWA claims.

    On 30 December 2004, Sam Obi, a Nigerian journalist was arrested and subjected to thorough questioning by officials of the Serious Crime Unit of Gambia Police Force for six hours. Obi's arrest followed an interview he granted to Radio France International (RFI) about a march organised by the Gambia Press Union (GPU) to protest the murder of Hydara.

    On 13 October 2005, the Gambian authorities ordered the management of The Point to discontinue the ‘Good Morning Mr President’ column started by Deyda Hydara. The then director general of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Daba Marrena, told Pap Saine, the then managing editor of The Point, that President Jammeh and other government officials were not happy with the column. Following the directive, the column was taken out from the subsequent editions of the newspaper. The management of the newspaper said the authorities threatened to close down the newspaper if it failed to remove the column.

    Further, on the first anniversary of Hydara's murder (16 December 2005), officers from the Gambia Police Intervention Force sealed off the site of Hydara's murder preventing members of the Gambia Press Union (GPU) and foreign journalists from accessing the site. The officers claimed the GPU did not have authority to assemble. This resulted in a clash.

    Ramatoulie Charreh, a female photojournalist who attempted to take pictures of the clash had her camera seized.

    Ten months after that, the NIA on 27 October 2006, arrested and questioned Musa Saidykhan, then editor of The Independent newspaper following an interview he granted to other newspapers on Hydara. Some newspapers quoted Saidykhan who had then returned from The All Africa Editors Forum in South Africa as saying that then South African President Thabo Mbeki said he would assist the Gambian authorities to resolve Hydara's murder.

    The NIA took Saidykhan to their office, interrogated him for many hours after which he was made to write a statement on his trip to South Africa as well as answer questions relating to his profession.

    The government silenced media who spoke about Hydara's murder and also attempted to vilify the slain journalist. In an interview on the state-owned Gambian Radio and Television Stations (GRTS) on June 9, 2009, President Yahya Jammeh quoted the findings of NIA which concluded that Hydara's gruesome murder was as a “result of personal revenge by a jealous husband, whose wife committed adultery with Hydara”.

    Application at ECOWAS Court

    On 23 November 2011, Hydara's family, together with the International Federation of Journalists-Africa, filed a suit at the ECOWAS Court against The Gambia. In their application, Hydara's family argued that The Gambia:

    • Failed to effectively investigate the murder of journalist Deyda Hydara.
    • Caused and tolerated impunity concerning the death of Hydara.
    • Violated the right to freedom of expression.
    • Failed to provide redress to Hydara's family, because failing to properly investigate the crime inhibited the family from obtaining compensation. 

    At the trial, Captain Lamin K. Saine, a senior official NIA who was the head of the team that conducted investigations into Hydara's murder, testified as their witness. He defended the NIA investigation and said it was prompt, independent, and that the NIA had included the family. Saine also admitted that the NIA dedicated only 22 days to investigating Hydara's murder.

    On 10 June 2014, the Court found the Gambian government guilty of failing to properly investigate Hydara's murder. The Court noted that the NIA investigations did not carry out any ballistic, bullets and or weapon tests as part of the investigation. It said by failing to conduct proper investigations, government allowed impunity to thrive in the country. The Court consequently ordered the Gambian government to pay $50,000 in damages Hydara's family and $10,000 as legal costs.

    The Gambia has yet to comply with the ruling of the Court, just as it has failed to comply with the two earlier rulings of the Court – in the cases of Chief Ebrimah Maneh and Musa Saidykhan. Meanwhile the freedom of expression condition in the country has worsened, the MFWA alleges; and it has again appealed to ECOWAS to ensure that The Gambia complies with the rulings of the Court and ensure justice for Hydara and his family.

    Source: mfwa.org.

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