From Garoweonline.com
SOMALIA: CPJ concerned about well-being of kidnapped journalists
By
May 26, 2009 - 10:23:36 PM
New York, May 26,
2009—The Committee to Protect Journalists is deeply concerned
about the well-being of a Canadian and an Australian journalist held hostage in
Somalia who urged their respective governments to work harder for their release
in a phone call with a reporter on Sunday. Both journalists said they were sick
and being held in harsh conditions.
Freelance
Canadian journalist Amanda Lindhout and Australian photographer Nigel Brennan
said they were in poor health and urged their respective governments to help
free them, according to news reports and local journalists. The two journalists
briefly spoke separately to an Agence France-Presse (AFP) correspondent in
Mogadishu on the phone for five minutes on Sunday from an undisclosed
location.
“We are
deeply concerned by the statements made by Amanda Lindhout and Nigel Brennan
that they are ill and being held in harsh conditions,” said CPJ Deputy Director
Robert Mahoney. “We call upon the Australian and Canadian authorities to
intensify their efforts to ensure their safe and quick
release.”
The AFP
correspondent said both hostages sounded very weak on the phone and appeared to
be reading from a script. There was no independent confirmation of their
identities.
Lindhout
said she had been sick for months while kept alone in a windowless room with
access only to unclean drinking water and one meal per day at most. Brennan
complained of suffering from an extreme fever and said he has been held in
shackles for the last four months.
The call
was made after weeks of efforts to establish contact with the hostages,
according to AFP. The last reported signs of Lindhout and Brennan were on
January 15 after their fixer, Somali freelance journalist Abdifatah Elmi was
released. Elmi was taken hostage with the two foreign journalists and their
driver last August. According to an interview with Elmi in the Canadian daily
Globe and Mail, they were all kept in separate
rooms but managed to communicate occasionally with each other with improvised
sign language.
The three journalists and driver Mahad
Clise were returning from interviewing refugees at Celasha Biyaha when they were
kidnapped along the Afgoye-Mogadishu road last August by unknown gunmen,
according to local journalists. Mogadishu is in the grip of
fighting between rival clans and militias.
The two
have been held hostage in one of the longest kidnappings in recent cases in
Somalia.
CPJ is a New York-based,
independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom
worldwide. For more information, visit www.cpj.org.being
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