"A beacon of journalism through the civil war", "a voice for the
voiceless", "brave and courageous",
"gracious and committed" are just some of the tributes being paid to South Sudanese journalist and politician Alfred Taban, whose death was announced over the weekend.
"gracious and committed" are just some of the tributes being paid to South Sudanese journalist and politician Alfred Taban, whose death was announced over the weekend.
Taban,
a former reporter for the BBC World Service's Focus on Africa and
Network Africa programmes in Sudan's capital Khartoum, was the founder
and former editor-in-chief of the Khartoum Monitor.
It
was Sudan's first independent English-language paper - launched in
September 2000 and renamed the Juba Monitor after South Sudan became
independent in 2011.
When he was
awarded the National Endowment for Democracy in 2006, the US
pro-democracy foundation said Taban had "been one of the leading
nonviolent voices of Sudan’s dispossessed and marginalised communities,
as well as an advocate for national reconciliation, human rights and
democracy.”
He was repeatedly jailed
by the authorities in Khartoum and was later imprisoned by those in
South Sudan for his determination to tell the truth.
BRAVE
Amongst
his other accolades was the UK’s prestigious House of Commons Press
Gallery Speaker Abbot Award for his “bravery in the face of personal
risk including torture, and for his commitment to bring to the wider
world the horrors of Darfur”.
Rachael
Akidi Okwir, head of BBC East Africa and who accompanied him to collect
that honour in 2005, says she remembers him as "a champion of media
freedom in Sudan before the referendum that paved the way for the
independence of South Sudan".
In 2017, Taban went into politics and became an MP as part of efforts to end the civil war in the world's newest country.
"Alfred
always argued that he was nudged to join politics, and despite later
suffering poor health brought about by a stroke, he kept going even when
his speech slurred," Akidi Okwir says.
According
to South Sudan's Eye Radio, Taban negotiated the release of political
prisoners, including journalists, before accepting an appointment to the
National Dialogue Initiative.
Eye
Radio’s station manager Koang Pal said that Taban was a “hero and a true
freedom fighter” second only to John Garang, the former rebel leader
considered the father of South Sudan.
Others on Twitter have described him as a mentor and BBC colleagues have remembered how generous he was with his advice.
A
campaign has been launched on social media to raise money for the
family of the 62-year-old to pay for outstanding bills at the hospital
where he died in Uganda and to take his body home for burial.
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