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Gambian journalists remain in prison
The seventh, Mrs Sarata Dibba Jabbi, the only women amongst those charged, was granted bail to look after her six-month-old baby until the next sitting. The six will now be held in Banjul’s Mile Two prison until Wednesday 8 July. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) says it is outraged with the decision and calls for the six to be released immediately and unconditionally. Media freedom groups staged demonstrations in Africa and the UK as the seven appeared in court in [[Banjul]], [[Gambia]]. On a day of activities against what media freedom campaigners claim is a repression of press freedom in Gambia, the IFJ President joined a delegation from the National Union of Journalists (NUJ, an IFJ affiliate, the British Trades Union Congress (TUC)and Amnesty to delivered a letter of protest to President Jammeh of the Gambia at the country's High Commission in London. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has condemned what it calles the "unprecedented harassment" of the seven. The CPJ's Africa Programme Coordinator Tom Rhodes said it looks like a government campaign against independent media. "The charges against these journalists represent a government ploy to wipe out the last vestiges of the private press in the country and the courts should reverse this decision and release the journalists immediately," he said. |
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