Single Sign-On
Tweets
Hello Me
User Videos
Latest News / Wararka Cusub
- Mo Farah: Run away success, a man with odds stacked against him
- Urban warfare: Civilian casualties worries international community
- Somali group warns more troops will be annihilated
- Militant Alliance Adds to Somalia’s Turmoil
- European Commission allocates €35 million for victims of conflict and natural disasters in Somalia
- Somaliland: A democratic beacon of hope in a dangerous part of the world
- Somaliland: Silanyo sworn in as president
- AU to send 4,000 troops to Somalia, US against peacekeepers attacking Al-Shabaab
- Fighting in Mogadishu, at least 32 dead officials say
- Seychelles convicts 11 Somali pirates to 10 years
- Thirteen insurgents killed in Somalia's Puntland
- AU to send an extra 2000 troops to Somalia
- Puntland forces attack al-Shabab in Somali mountains
Newsletter and Updates
Online Users
| Journalist Groups Condemn UN Somalia Envoy's Media 'War' Comment |
|
|
|
| News - Media & Technology | ||||||
| Friday, 13 February 2009 11:44 | ||||||
|
The National Union of Somali Journalists has condemned statements by U.N. special envoy to Somalia Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, suggesting that Islamist extremists are using the local media to wage a disinformation war aimed at undermining peace efforts.
"He has to apologize and withdraw that statement and make a public commitment to defend the rights and the professional independence of the journalists," he said. In the original interview with VOA, Ould-Abdallah charged that a reported massacre of civilians by African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu had been timed to draw attention away from the election of Somali President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed. The president had been elected less than 24-hours earlier, and was making his debut at the African Union summit in Addis Ababa when the news broke. The massacre was widely reported by all major international news agencies, including VOA, but the facts have since been disputed, and human rights groups have called for an international investigation.
Somalia is widely considered to be one of the most dangerous, if not the most dangerous places in the world for journalists. Most news agencies forbid their international staff to travel there. Source: VOA The comment section is restricted to members only. |













