Malian journalist brutally attacked

Malian journalist brutally attacked

Malian journalist was abducted and "beaten to a pulp."
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Saouti Haidara, editor of the private daily "The Independent".

 

Gunmen abducted the director of a Malian private newspaper from his office and beat him severely before releasing him.

Saouti Haidara is now in hospital with serious injuries, a colleague said to AFP.

"Several armed men came on Thursday to the newspaper's offices," said a journalist with L'Independant newspaper, who asked not to be named.

They fired their weapons into the air before abducting Saouti Haidara, the source added.

"Saouti was threatened in front of us while he was giving instructions to the printer about the (next day's) newspaper," he added.

"The armed men were very tense."

A few hours later Haidara was released but according to the journalist "he has been beaten, tortured, by the armed men.

"He was admitted very quickly to a medical centre in Bamako. He was really beaten to a pulp."

“Haidara is in a serious condition, the armed men broke his right arm which is in plaster. He was also hit in the head and is in a very bad state," said Makan Kone, president of the Bamako Press House.

"They threatened to kill him if he laid charges," Kone said.

He condemned "repeated attacks on freedom of expression" and a "deliberate operation of retaliation against the Malian press which is only doing its job.

"These people want to kill democracy and we will organise a march and observe a day of no press," he added, without giving further details.

State intelligence agents briefly arrested Haidara in June.

Several other journalists have been attacked or held briefly since Mali was plunged into crisis by a March 22 coup, which created a political vacuum that allowed several armed groups to seize the country's north.

In May the director of bi-monthly private journal Le Pretoire, Birama Fall, was also held by state security agents over an article he had written.

Last week another journalist was taken and beaten by armed men in Bamako.

Source: AFP

 

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