This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-africa-14929307
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Wikileaks cable: Ethiopia reporter Argaw Ashine 'flees' | Wikileaks cable: Ethiopia reporter Argaw Ashine 'flees' |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Ethiopian reporter Argaw Ashine has told the BBC he has fled his country because he was cited in a US diplomatic cable released by Wikileaks last month. | |
He said he was interrogated by officials seeking the identity of his government source referred to in a 2009 cable about press harassment. | |
"It was a bit scary... not a wise idea to stay in such a scenario," he said. | |
Wikileaks says the cable does not cite Mr Argaw as a US embassy informant and "no journalistic source is named". | |
But the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) says it is the first instance in which a citation in a Wikileaks cables has caused direct repercussions for a journalist. | |
"The threat we sought to avert through redactions of initial Wikileaks cables has now become real," Joel Simon, the executive director of the US-based media watchdog said in a statement. | |
"A citation in one of these cables can easily provide repressive governments with the perfect opportunity to persecute or punish journalists and activists," he said. | "A citation in one of these cables can easily provide repressive governments with the perfect opportunity to persecute or punish journalists and activists," he said. |
'Big loss' | |
Mr Argaw, who works for Kenya's Daily Nation newspaper and is chairman of the Ethiopian Environment Journalists Association, requested that his location not be revealed for safety reasons. | |
He said he fled over the weekend after he was summoned for intensive questioning by officials from the Government Communication Affairs Office (GCAO) on two occasions and a third time by the police with regard to href="http://cables.mrkva.eu/cable.php?id=231352" title="Link to the Wikileaks cable" >the US cable of 26 October 2009. | |
It was relating attempts to silence the private Amharic language Addis Neger newspaper, which has since closed and its editors fled the country. | |
"A contact within GCAO told the Addis Ababa-based Daily Nation reporter Argaw Ashene [Ashine] that the GCAO had drawn up a list of the six top Addis Neger officials... who they plan to target in order to silence the newspaper's analysis," the cable says. | "A contact within GCAO told the Addis Ababa-based Daily Nation reporter Argaw Ashene [Ashine] that the GCAO had drawn up a list of the six top Addis Neger officials... who they plan to target in order to silence the newspaper's analysis," the cable says. |
Mr Argaw told the BBC he knew from his source about a plan to charge the Addis Neger journalists under anti-terrorism laws, but did not pass this information directly to the US embassy. | |
"We had a discussion to support and to help those friends at the Addis Neger newspaper... and the embassy representative was part of the discussion," he told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme. | |
Mr Argaw said he had refused to give into the intimidation as ethically he felt he could not disclose his source. | |
"I was summoned by the police and they clearly told me that I have two choices, disclose my source, otherwise face any possible consequences. | |
"We have this anti-terrorism bill and according to that law I [could] face 20 years in prison with a single charge," he said. | |
"Many of my friends and colleagues are facing similar charges and they are forced to flee the country." | |
Mr Argaw said he did not feel betrayed by the US embassy as the leak was not intentional, but the events of the last week had come as a shock. | |
"It's very sad, within a week leaving your home without any preparation. I love my country and I love my job and it's a big loss for me." | |
Wikileaks said the CPJ was being misleading in its statement, as Mr Argaw was only mentioned in passing in the cable and was not on a list of journalists sent by the CPJ asking that their names be witheld before the cables were published. | |
"While, it is outrageous for a journalist to feel the need to leave their country for a period, neither is it good for the CPJ to distort the facts for marketing purposes," Wikileaks said in a statement. | "While, it is outrageous for a journalist to feel the need to leave their country for a period, neither is it good for the CPJ to distort the facts for marketing purposes," Wikileaks said in a statement. |