The son of the late journalist Deyda Hydara, in blue, stands outside the ECOWAS court with his lawyers. (CPJ/Peter Nkanga) |
CPJ - Abuja, Nigeria, June 10,
2014--The Committee to Protect Journalists welcomes today's ruling by a
West African regional court, which found that the Gambian government
failed to conduct a meaningful investigation into the murder of
journalist Deyda Hydara. The ruling is the first ECOWAS case relating to
the murder of a Gambian journalist.
Hydara, the founder of the independent newspaper The Point,
was shot dead by unidentified assailants as he drove home from his
office in the capital, Banjul, on December 16, 2004. Hydara, a regular
critic of President Yahya Jammeh's harsh policies, had received multiple
death threats in the months leading up to his death. His murder remains
unsolved.
A panel of three justices in the Nigeria-based
Economic Community of West African States Court of Justice declared
today that Gambia's National Intelligence Agency, tasked with
investigating Hydara's murder, did not carry out a proper investigation
and cited its failure to carry out ballistic tests on the bullets and
weapons recovered from suspects. The court said the Gambia's National
Intelligence Agency was "not an impartial body to conduct the
investigation" but that there was no evidence linking the Gambian
government to the murder. The court awarded US$50,000 to Hydara's family
as compensation for the government's failure to effectively investigate
the murder, and US$10,000 for legal costs.
The court further held that previous ECOWAS rulings against the Gambia in the cases of "Chief" Ebrima Manneh and Musa Saidykhan
proved the Gambian government was fostering a climate of impunity which
in itself was a violation of freedom of expression in the country. Manneh,
a Gambian reporter, disappeared in 2006, and has long been believed to
be in government custody, and Saidykhan, a journalist now living in
exile, was detained for three weeks in 2006 and allegedly tortured,
according to reports. In both cases, the ECOWAS court ruled in the
journalists' favor. The Gambian government has not yet complied with
either of the rulings.
"Today's ruling by the ECOWAS court underscores the
responsibility of governments to protect journalists and provide an
environment in which the press can operate safely," said CPJ West Africa
Correspondent Peter Nkanga. "It is imperative that the international
community ensures the Gambia complies with the court as a first step
toward combating the climate of impunity."
The law firm Aluko & Oyebode, which represents Hydara's family, brought the lawsuit to the court with support from the Open Society Initiative for West Africa. The court's ruling is final with no mechanism to appeal, Dindam Killi, lawyer of the Hydara family, told CPJ.
The Gambia, which is part of the 15-member ECOWAS regional bloc, faces no sanctions for failure to comply, Killi told CPJ.
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