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Cameroon shuts down station over secessionist
interview
May 13, 2013
Le Cameroun ferme une radio pour diffusion d'une interview avec des
s�cessionnistes.
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The staff of Foundation Radio (Fomunyoh Foundation)
New York, May 13, 2013 — The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the
closure of an independent radio station on April 22 in retaliation for its
broadcast of an interview that authorities said incited secessionism.
Local officials in the northwestern city of Bamenda indefinitely shut down the
studios of private station Foundation Radio, local
journalists and news reports said. The injunction, which was signed by Felix
Nguele Nguele, the top official in Bamenda, and originated from the Cameroonian
minister of communications, ordered the station to be shut down because of its
repeated broadcasts that "incited secessionism," according to CPJ's review of
the document.
News accounts reported that the station was shut down in reprisal for its March
25 morning talk show, called "Good Morning Bamenda Show," in which the host, Tikum Mbah Azonga, interviewed two guests from the
outlawed Southern Cameroons National Council (SCNC), which calls for the
secession of the English-speaking northwest and southwest provinces from the
French-speaking remainder of Cameroon.
Azonga, who is also the station manager, told CPJ by email that the station did
not in any way support secession or the SCNC.
Azonga told CPJ he went to the police three times for questioning and was asked
to submit a copy of the recording of the program. "They were wondering how I, as
a journalist they knew to be very responsible, could have allowed the SCNC to
speak?" he said. Winifred Weregwe, administrator of the Fomunyoh Foundation,
which runs the station, told CPJ that police also indicated they were sending
the recording to the Ministry of Communications.
A January 2012 presidential decree granted the state-run National Communications
Council broad regulatory authority to suspend news outlets, but since
2003, the government's Ministry of Communications has also summarily shut down
at least 10 independent broadcasters in response to critical coverage, according
to CPJ research.
"The actions of the Cameroonian government to silence Foundation Radio over one
program illustrates how far the state will go to suppress news and information
about the secessionist claims in the northwest part of the country," said CPJ
Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita. "We call on authorities to allow
Foundation Radio back on the air immediately."
Foundation Radio is run by the U.S.-based Fomunyoh Foundation. Its founder, Christopher
Fomunyoh, has highlighted over the years the shortcomings of the
political system under President Paul Biya as a Senior Associate and Regional
Director for Central and West Africa at the National Democratic Institute,
according to local journalists.
- For more data and analysis on Cameroon, visit CPJ's Cameroon page here.
Messages of support and encouragement to Foundation Radio journalists and
staff should be addressed to FoundationRadio1@gmail.com.
Thank you.
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