By AFP
KAMPALA
Uganda's government ordered
police Thursday to allow journalists back into the main independent
newspaper after a 10-day blockade that has sparked widespread criticism,
but another paper remains shut.
Police, who shut down The Daily
Monitor and Red Pepper newspapers on May 20 after they reported
arguments among army generals over whether the president's son is to
succeed him, had blocked journalists from publishing while they
conducted a search for confidential leaked documents they had quoted.
"The police has called off the
cordon of the Monitor premises, so that they resume their normal
business as police continue with the search," Internal Affairs Minister
Hilary Onek told reporters, speaking alongside police chief Kale
Kayihura.
However, to allow the paper to
reopen, Monitor officials have agreed to "tighten their internal
editorial" processes, including ensuring stories "that impact especially
on national security are subjected to the most rigorous scrutiny and
verification process before they run," Onek added.
Observers have warned the police
closures -- financially crippling to the papers -- would lead to great
self-censorship in the future.
The Monitor has also agreed not
to publish stories that could "generate tensions, ethnic hatred, cause
insecurity or disturb law and order", Onek added.
The closures left only one major operating newspaper, the government-owned New Vision.
Two radio stations in the Monitor offices will also be allowed to resume operation, but Red Pepper remains shuttered for now.
"We shall be meeting the Red
Pepper leadership... if they agree that they operate within the law, we
have no problem allowing them to re-open," Onek said.\
\
The closures came after the
newspapers in early May printed a leaked confidential memo by a senior
general, David Sejusa Tinyefuza, alleging that President Yoweri Museveni
was grooming his son Muhoozi Kainerugaba to succeed him.
Tinyefuza said there were plots to assassinate those opposed to the plan, a report criticised by other generals.
Muhoozi, a brigadier who now
commands Uganda's special forces, has recently enjoyed rapid promotion
through the ranks, although Museveni has made no mention of plans for
him to succeed.
The police declared both newspaper offices crime scenes and said they were searching for documents.
"This is what we have been waiting for," the
Monitor's managing director Alex Asiimwe said. "After all this time, we
are back to operations."
The closures have sparked angry demonstrations by
journalists and their supporters, with scuffles breaking out on Tuesday
and Wednesday as reporters tried to breach the police cordon, and
officers beating them back with batons and firing tear gas.
The United Nations and European Union both condemned the newspaper closures.
"It's disturbing that intimidation and harassment
are being used in retaliation against the exercise of freedom of
expression," the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said last week.
"Ahead of the 2016 elections, the current events
may serve to reinforce self-censorship and severely constrict freedom
of opinion and expression at a key moment in Uganda's political
development."
Media watchdogs including the US-based Committee
to Protect Journalists, France-based Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF -
Reporters Without Borders) and the Foreign Correspondents' Association
of Uganda condemned the closures.
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