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Somali Government Official Orders Media to Send Content for Approval, Journalists Say


An interview is conducted at Radio Risaala in Somalia's capital Mogadishu. (Risaala Media Corporation)
An interview is conducted at Radio Risaala in Somalia's capital Mogadishu. (Risaala Media Corporation)

EDITOR's NOTE: After publication of this story, the Somali information minister contacted VOA and denied that the government had issued a verbal directive. The minister said that the person who identified himself in calls to media outlets was not known to the presidential communications office. Paragraph two has been updated to include additional details about the calls media outlets said they received. Read the latest on this story here.

MOGADISHU, SOMALIA - In its latest directive to media, the Somali government has requested that local news outlets submit content for approval before it airs.

At least four media outlets told VOA they had received a call from a person who identified himself as Abdikadir Hussein Wehliye, a communications officer at the presidential office, Villa Somalia, and who verbally told them to submit content before broadcast.

Separately, a member of the Somali Journalists Syndicate told VOA that a senior official in the communications office, who asked for anonymity, had confirmed the calls were made and said the directive “came from above.”

Among those affected was Risaala Media Corporation in the capital, Mogadishu. Its managing director, Mohamed Abdiwahab, said, "The objective was censorship, because directing [the media] to send the items is just singling out the items that they don't like. Therefore, its implementation is risky to Somali media and cannot be implemented.”

Deputy Information Minister Abdirahman Yusuf Adala told VOA via a messaging app that he was not aware of such a directive.

But Abdiwahab said an official called his company with the directive last Saturday. He said he thought the order infringed on the country’s constitution and media law, both of which provide guarantees for media freedom.

The directive was the latest government order directed at media. In recent months, journalists were warned off from publishing al-Shabab content and to refer to the militant group only as Khawarij, which loosely translates as “those who deviate from the Islamic faith.”

The Somali government is engaged in a military campaign against al-Shabab. But journalists say the directives on covering the group will limit press freedom and could put them at risk of retaliation.

Somali Journalists Syndicate spokesperson Mohamed Bulbul said he saw the order as another move to curtail independence.

“It will have an impact on journalists and media, and if it is not rejected, then there will be no media or journalists reporting the truth," he said. "We are not ready to work with the government in the implementation of this directive, but we are ready to work with the government in ways to improve freedom of expression.”

The Somali Journalists Syndicate, an umbrella organization for media that protested the directives, has come under pressure from authorities. Its secretary-general, Abdalle Ahmed Mumin, is currently out on bail after two arrests in October and November.

Journalists and guests are pictured at Radio Risaala in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu. (Risaala Media Corporation)
Journalists and guests are pictured at Radio Risaala in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu. (Risaala Media Corporation)

Journalists say submitting content will interfere with editorial independence and the public’s right to know. Abdirahman Adani, editor of Garowe Online, said the new directive "paves the way for the government to silence the independent media, which is now the only trusted source of news for the public.”

Adani said the directive would force media to surrender their watchdog role.

“This directive bars the media from disseminating the truth, and it also bars the media from airing unbiased news," he said. "It also blocks the media from reporting any items which are against the will of the government.”

Somalia is already a difficult environment for reporters, media watchdogs say. As well as attacks and threats, journalists risk arrest.

In the latest case, British-based freelancer Jamal Osman, who has won awards for his coverage of al-Shabab, was arrested in Mogadishu last Saturday and was deported to the United Kingdom. The reason for his deportation was not made public.

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