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Gambia: Journalist's Trial Resumes; Public Barred From Attending


 

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Media Foundation for West Africa (Accra)

PRESS RELEASE
24 April 2008
Posted to the web 24 April 2008

The Kanifing Magistrate Court trying Fatou Jaw Manneh, a US-based Gambian journalist, for alleged sedition on 21 April 2008 restricted the general public from the trial by ruling that only Manneh's family members and two journalists were to be admitted to the court.

Media Foundation for West Africa's (MFWA) sources reported that the ruling followed an earlier application filed by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) of The Gambia, Emmanuel Fagbenle. The DPP had earlier asked the court to protect the prosecution witnesses by concealing their identities.

The sources said Lamin Jobarteh, Manneh's counsel, objected to the court's decision, arguing that courts all over the world were an open platform for the general public. This was, however, overruled.

Following the new ruling, a third witness also testified against the journalist.

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BACKGROUND:

Manneh, a former journalist with the "Daily Observer" newspaper in its early days, has been charged with three counts of sedition, following a series of articles she wrote criticising the regime of President Yahya Jammeh. Upon her arrival on 28 March 2007 in the Gambia, she was arrested, detained for a week, and had her travel documents confiscated by the authorities.

Since her arrest, Manneh's case has been moving back and forth from one magistrate's court to another. The courts have argued that they lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter, because the said articles were published on the Internet. However, on 7 December 2007, a High Court in Banjul ruled that the case could be tried anywhere because of the global nature of the Internet and referred it back to the court where it was first tried - the Kanifing Magistrate Court. On 11 March 2008, the case was delayed further as Magistrate Jawo failed to show up in court.


Recent comments on Gambia: Journalist's Trial Resumes; Public Barred From Attending. Click here to write your own.
Author: louisoboy2001

Whenever i read depressing articles like this i tend to wonder whether we have a Democracy in The Gambia or "DIRIMOCRACY". How can anyone beleive that Rule of Law is still alive in the Gambia as Yaya Jammeh tend to make outsiders beleive.

I am kind of lost here, can someone actually convince me that what we have in the Gambia is not a Monarchy where anyone that stands for the truth stands alone and faces persecution.

This world have seen so many powerful and brutal dictatorships, in Europe, Africa, Asia and all over the world and how they... [Read Full Text]


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