Bloomberg

11/09/2023

Congo Journalist Detained for Report Related to Murder Probe​

Yellow taxi van vehicles line the streets in the Victoire district of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, on Friday, Jan. 11, 2019. Photographer: John Wessels/Bloomberg


Yellow taxi van vehicles line the streets in the Victoire district of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, on Friday, Jan. 11, 2019. Photographer: John Wessels/Bloomberg , Bloomberg
Michael J. Kavanagh, Bloomberg News
Sep 11, 2023


(Bloomberg) -- One of Democratic Republic of Congo’s most-prominent journalists was detained by police amid an investigation into the assassination of a top opposition politician, according to an association representing reporters for France’s Jeune Afrique.

Stanis Bujakera, a Jeune Afrique correspondent, was arrested Friday at the airport in the capital, Kinshasa, and is accused of allegedly spreading false information about the killing of Cherubin Okende Senga in a story by the agency in August, the association said in its statement Monday on X, formerly known as Twitter. Police confiscated his phones and computer.

Prosecutors placed Bujakera under a provisional arrest warrant on Monday, according to Actualite.cd, where he is deputy publication director. Bujakera also contributes to Reuters.

Congo’s government didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The British, US, Spanish, French, Belgian and Swiss embassies or ambassadors have released statements raising concerns about the detention, calling it an attack on press freedom.

Read More: Democratic Republic of Congo Expels Reuters Journalist

A resource-rich country, Africa’s second largest by landmass, Congo is scheduled to hold elections in December.

(Adds provisional arrest warrant in third paragraph)
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

 
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14/12/2020

China warns of interference over Bloomberg journalist arrest​


Chinese flags

IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
Image caption, It's not yet clear why the journalist Haze Fan has been detained.

China has said the arrest of a journalist working for the newswire Bloomberg is an "internal affair", warning others not to interfere.

Chinese citizen Haze Fan was detained last week, accused of endangering national security by authorities. It is the latest in a string of arrests or expulsions of journalists in China.

The European Union (EU) responded by urging China to release all journalists held in connection with their reporting.

In a statement released on Saturday, the EU said it expected Chinese authorities to grant Ms Fan "medical assistance if needed, prompt access to a lawyer of her choice, and contacts with her family".
The Foreign Correspondents Club in China (FCCC) also expressed its solidarity, adding that international media depended on its Chinese staff.

However, the Chinese Embassy in the EU responded on Sunday, saying Ms Fan was "suspected of engaging in criminal activities that endanger China's national security and was recently taken into compulsory measures by the Beijing State Security Bureau in accordance with the law".

On its official WeChat account, it added that the case is currently being investigated in accordance with the law and that Ms Fan's rights are fully ensured. This is "entirely an internal affair of China, and no other country or organization has the right to interfere".

US newspapers

IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
Image caption, Several US journalists have already been expelled

Ms Fan has been at Bloomberg since 2017, having previously worked for news agency Reuters, as well as for CNBC, Al Jazeera and CBS News.

She was seen being escorted from her apartment building by plain-clothes security officials on 7 December, shortly after she had been in contact with one of her editors.

"We are very concerned for her, and have been actively speaking to Chinese authorities to better understand the situation," a spokeswoman for New York-based Bloomberg said. "We are continuing to do everything we can to support her while we seek more information."

The FCCC said in a tweet it "expresses its solidarity with the talented Chinese nationals who perform an invaluable service for foreign media outlets in China".

"Chinese nationals offer critical research and linguistic support for foreign reporting in China. Without their support, it would be difficult for foreign media to operate in China.

The FCCC also said it was seeking "clarity on why authorities detained Haze Fan". Ms Fan is not the first journalist to run into trouble with Chinese authorities this year.
Earlier in 2020, mainland China effectively expelled journalists from three leading US newspapers when it ordered reporters from the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal to return their media passes within days as its relations with Washington worsened.

In August, authorities in Beijing detained China-born Australian citizen Cheng Lei, a journalist working for the Chinese state-run broadcaster CGTN, on national security grounds. In September, two Australian correspondents abruptly left China after they were questioned by China's state security ministry.

In Hong Kong, pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai earlier this month was charged under the territory's controversial new national security law.

 
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Dave Evans

Regular
Classic deceptive and misleading photo (similar to what tommy twat does) in this article by Bloomberg. What a suspect and shit rag it is. This was reposted many times by the MMGA stooges on twitter

 
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