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STATEMENT
January 24, 2011
Public Officials Must Accept Criticism

MONROVIA, January 24, 2011: The Center for Media Studies and Peace Building (CEMESP) is calling upon public officials to be mindful that they are responsible to the citizenry and must accept any and all criticisms in good faith.

“Criminalizing criticism of public actions destroys opportunities for the tracking of public actions, permitting the strengthening of impunity, and is an undeserved return to the past.”

The statement from CEMESP is in response to the January 22, 2011 detention of the Managing Editor of the Front Page Africa newspaper Rodney Sieh at Monrovia’s maximum “South Beach” prison.

Journalist Sieh was on a 30-day prison sentence, upon the orders of Liberia’s Supreme Court following the expiration of a 48-hour ultimatum, which demanded an apology and a fine of three hundred United States dollars.

The Supreme Court claimed disrespect, when Sieh accused the bench of being dictatorial for refusing to permit him to read a prepared text when summoned to clarify a reader’s opinion which was published by the newspaper.

The entire episode grew out of Sieh’s Front Page Africa’s October 25, 2010 publication of an article "Biasness, Discrimination and Prejudice in the Angel Tokpah case" submitted by a certain Garsuah Gborvleh. In the letter, Gborvleh accused Associate Justice Gladys Johnson of bias when she "arbitrarily drove family members and friends of the little murdered girl . . . from the court."

According to CEMESP, “the action by the Supreme Court places the application of Article 15 of the Liberian constitution, which permits freedom of expression and the right to hold opinions without interference, in a difficult position.”

“It is high time that Liberia sign unto and apply the provisions of the Table Mountain Declaration, which calls for states to decriminalize speech offenses,” CEMESP Executive Director Malcolm Joseph said.

“The government and public officials must recognize the power of free speech in the transformation of the Liberian state and work towards enhancing democracy and the sustenance of peace.”

Journalist Sieh has meanwhile been released. Press Union of Liberia President Peter Quaqua told CEMESP Sieh was released after midnight January 24, following an apology he reportedly made to the Supreme Court bench.

Signed:______________________
Malcolm Joseph
Executive Director/CEMESP


For further information contact CEMESP, Benson & Buchanan Streets, P.O. Box 3480, Monrovia, Liberia, tel: +231 651 4357, e-mail: centerforpeacebuilding@yahoo.com, Website: www.cemesp-liberia.org/

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of CEMESP. In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit CEMESP.

 


 
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