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New York,
December 17,
2010—Musa
Saidykhan, who was detained for three weeks
in 2006 by Gambian state security agents,
was tortured and must receive compensation,
a
West African
regional court
ruled on Thursday.
Saidykhan,
editor-in-chief of the now-banned private
biweekly
The
Independent, was
detained
for 22 days without charge by the Gambian
National
Intelligence Agency (NIA)
during a brutal government
crackdown
following a purported coup plot. He
said he was tortured during his
detention and brought a lawsuit at the
Nigeria-based
Court of Justice
of the
Economic Community
of West African States (ECOWAS)
demanding compensation for illegal detention
and torture.
On Thursday, a
panel of four judges ruled in his favor in a
lawsuit filed by the Ghana-based press
freedom group
Media Foundation
of West Africa. The court
ordered
the Gambian government to pay Saidykhan
damages of US$200,000. The ruling is final
without possibility of appeal, the
foundation’s executive director, Kwame
Karikari, told CPJ.
“We applaud this
ruling by the ECOWAS court of justice in
favor of Musa Saidykhan, who is one of many
Gambian journalists who have been illegally
arrested and treated like criminals for
doing their job,” said Africa Advocacy
Coordinator
Mohamed Keita
. “It is imperative that the international
community ensures that the Gambia complies
fully with this ruling.”
As a member state
of ECOWAS,
the Gambia
is required to pay the damages. The court’s
mandate stipulates unspecified sanctions for
failure to comply, according to CPJ
research.
In the court
papers, Saidykhan alleged that NIA agents
administered “electric shocks
on his body including his genitals” in order
to extract a self-incriminating confession
of involvement in the purported coup. NIA
agents also allegedly threatened to bury him
alive in a graveyard near the detention
center.
“As a result of the physical, mental, and
psychological torture inflicted on me, I am
left with scars on my back, legs, arms, and
a bayonet cut on my left jaw,” Saidkhan
stated in his affidavit.
Saidykhan fled
into
exile
after his release and
resettled
in the United States .
Authorities
have
blocked
The Independent from reopening since
raiding
and sealing of its offices in 2006. The
paper was known for its critical reporting
on the government.
Thursday’s
decision follows a
June 2008 ECOWAS
ruling ordering the Gambia
to release and compensate reporter “Chief”
Ebrima Manneh, who has disappeared in
government custody since his July 2006
arrest
by NIA agents. Authorities have continually
denying holding Manneh despite several
sightings
and have done nothing to abide by the court
decision.
url >
http://cpj.org/2010/12/ecowas-court-orders-gambia-to-compensate-tortured.php
CPJ is a New York–based, independent,
nonprofit organization that works to
safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more
information, visit
www.cpj.org.
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