The
Committee to Protect Journalists condemns attacks by Ugandan police against two
journalists in separate incidents outside of police stations today.
Police
officers beat freelance photographer Edward Echwalu as he was
trying to cover the arrest of opposition leader
Kizza Besigye at Kira Road Police Station in the capital, Kampala. Separately,
police beat Anatoli Luswata, a reporter for the private weekly Eddobozi,
outside Kampala's Central Police Station. Both journalists were trying to cover
the arrest of Besigye, local journalists told CPJ, but it wasn't clear until
later in the day which police station was holding him. Opposition supporters
were taken into custody after demonstrations against police brutality in
Kampala turned into clashes and one policeman died, according to wire reports.
Using
batons and a rifle butt, four officers repeatedly beat Echwalu, a photographer
for Reuters and the independent
weekly Observer, around
4:40 p.m. outside Kira Road Police Station where Besigye was detained, he told
CPJ. When Echwalu tried to explain to the police officers that he was covering
the event, they started to beat him. "They did not want to see my ID. They
didn't want to listen," Echwalu told CPJ. The beating continued until
opposition parliamentary members arrived on the scene. Echwalu said he
attempted to report the incident to the police station immediately afterwards,
but police did not allow him to enter. Bruised on his right arm and shoulder,
Echwalu went to Kampala Hospital for treatment, he said. Echwalu managed to
take photographs of the four officers after the incident.
Police
officers beat Luswata on his back with batons outside the gate of Kampala's
Central Police Station, local journalists told CPJ. They said they suspect
police attacked Luswata because he was the first to arrive at the scene and
there were no other reporters to cover the incident.
"Covering
opposition party issues is not a crime. Ugandan police must stop arbitrarily
attacking journalists simply for doing their job," said CPJ East Africa
Consultant Tom Rhodes. "Authorities must immediately identify the officers
who carried out these attacks and take disciplinary measures."
Calls to police spokeswoman Judith Nabakooba
went unanswered. According to CPJ research, police and
security agents were responsible for at least 21 cases of physical attacks
against journalists during the country's 2011 election year
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CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization
that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide.
CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization
that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide.
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