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Journalists face spying charges in Liberia
By Chris Talbot
25 August 2000
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Four journalists arrested in Monrovia, in the African state
of Liberia, are in prison facing charges of spying. They had been
filming and conducting interviews in Liberia for the last four
weeks for British-based Channel 4 television.
Director David Barrie and cameraman Timothy Lambon are British.
Another cameraman, Gugulakhe Radebe, is from South Africa and
the fourth is Sorious Samoura, a Sierra Leonean filmmaker. Samoura
is the producer of the documentary, Cry Freetown,
which featured the situation in Sierra Leone at the beginning
of 1999 when the capital Freetown was under attack from the rebel
Revolutionary United Front (RUF).
The journalists are accused of entering Liberia with criminal
design and carrying out interviews and filming in
sensitive areas of the republic, which could result in up
to 10 years in prison. Although lawyers have been appointed to
defend the men, they were not allowed to be present in court when
the charges were announced on Monday.
Liberia's deputy information minister Milton Teahjay told the
BBC that the men were trying to implicate Liberia in diamond-smuggling
and gun-running, and that they had been found conducting interviews
with security personnel. Referring to the mounting pressure on
Liberian President Charles Taylor from Britain and the United
States to stop his support for the RUF in neighbouring Sierra
Leone, Liberian Justice Minister Eddington Varmah stated that
the videotape seized from the men was designed to provide
assistance to foreign powers in their ongoing diplomatic confrontation
with Liberia.
Director of programmes for Channel 4 Tim Gardam said that the
four were making a documentary on how an African country can climb
out of the cycle of civil violence and try to re-establish political
and social structures. He said that this was discussed in
detail with the Liberian authorities and that the team had written
permission to film.
President Taylor has received appeals from US special envoy
to Africa, Rev Jesse Jackson, and former South African President
Nelson Mandela to release the four men. Both argued for a diplomatic
gesture in the face of the increasing Western isolation of Liberia.
The response from Britain was in keeping with the aggressive
campaign the Labour government has been pursuing through the United
Nations, demanding sanctions against Liberia over its trade in
conflict diamonds. Taylor's regime has been the main
support of the RUF in Sierra Leone, trading diamonds extracted
by the RUF for shipments of arms. Much of Liberia's income is
from diamond sales, not only from Sierra Leone but also from the
rebel Union for Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) forces fighting
the government in Angola and from forces engaged in the war in
the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Demanding the immediate release of the journalists, Foreign
Office Minister Peter Hain said of the arrests, It brings
the Liberian government into collision course not just with the
United Nations, which it already is over sanctions busting and
support for the rebel forces in Sierra Leone, but now also against
the whole international climate, which favours press freedom.
Despite the official explanation by Gardam, it seems likely
that Channel 4 were responding to the British government's recent
criticisms of Liberia. Given the brutal nature of Taylor's autocratic
rule and his personal enrichment at the expense of the rest of
the population, it would hardly be difficult for a journalist
to find damning evidence against his regime. But official denunciation
of Taylor is a relatively new departure. Until the RUF resumed
its war against the Sierra Leone government earlier this year,
Britain was prepared to follow the United States in backing him
as a strongman in the region, turning a blind eye to his diamond
and arms operations. Few Western journalists were sent to Liberia
and it rarely featured in the media.
Taylor led one of the factions in an eight-year civil war in
Liberia, in which West African ECOMOG troops, led by Nigeria and
originally sent in with US and Western backing to resolve the
conflict, ended up as one more faction in the war. All sides were
involved in plundering and brutally suppressing the Liberian population.
By 1996, the US decided to push for a settlement of the conflict
and intervened through Nigeria to put Taylor, the leader of the
biggest rebel faction, into power. After elections were imposed
by the Nigerian military dictatorship, Taylor was established
as president in 1998.
The British military intervention in Sierra Leone in May this
year has resulted in a virtual recolonisation of the country,
with British advisors running every aspect of the government,
as well as organising and training pro-government militias against
the Liberian-backed RUF. The UN peacekeeping force, in disarray
after the RUF took hostages, was reorganised and expanded under
pressure from Britain. By employing propaganda directed against
RUF brutality such as amputations and the rape of civilians, Britain
has sought to bring Sierra Leone's diamond fields back under its
control.
In the US, there was initial reluctance to become involved
in Sierra Leone, as well as divisions within the administration
and with Britain over whether to continue support for Taylor.
In the last month this was resolved, with US Under Secretary of
State Thomas Pickering travelling to the Liberian capital Monrovia
and demanding that Taylor cease supporting the RUF or face the
consequences. Nigerian troops, financed by the US and trained
by several hundred US soldiers, are to join the UN force in Sierra
Leone.
Taylor's arrest of the journalists indicates that rather than
lose his diamond income he will risk confrontation with the US
and Britain, which could easily turn into a military conflict.
See Also:
US reasserts its interests in Africa,
sending troops to Nigeria
[16 August 2000]
Carve-up of diamond and mineral
rights exposed, as Britain continues recolonisation of Sierra
Leone
[26 June 2000]
Africa
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