Press freedom advocates demanded Thursday that Tanzanian
authorities disclose everything they
know about missing journalist Azory Gwanda, after a government minister said the reporter who disappeared in 2017 was dead.
know about missing journalist Azory Gwanda, after a government minister said the reporter who disappeared in 2017 was dead.
Foreign Minister
Palamagamba Kabudi told the BBC that Gwanda, who vanished after
reporting on a string of murders, had "disappeared and died" somewhere
in Tanzania's eastern Rufiji region.
Gwanda's
wife said he vanished on November 21, 2017, after leaving in a white
Toyota Land Cruiser with unknown people on an "emergency trip".
He promised to return the following evening but was never seen again.
Kabudi's statement provoked outrage in Tanzania and beyond.
"The
government has a responsibility to protect all citizens. Family,
friends and the public want to know what happened to Gwanda. If he is
dead, we have a right to know under what circumstances," Anna Henga from
the Legal and Human Rights Centre, a Tanzanian advocacy group, told
AFP.
Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
-- which has called Tanzanian President John Magufuli a "press freedom
predator" -- joined the call for answers.
"After
a year and a half of silence and then downplaying the journalist's
disappearance, the minister announces his death without explanation,"
RSF's Africa representative Arnaud Froger told AFP.
"The
flippancy with which the Tanzanian authorities have handled this case
illustrates the low regard they have for the safe exercise of free and
independent journalism."
The US-based Committee to Protect Journalists called the minister's remarks "wholly inadequate and distressing".
Police
said in 2017 they were investigating the disappearance of Gwanda, a
reporter for the Tanzanian newspapers Mwananchi and The Citizen.
Tanzanian
civil society groups have accused the government of President John
Magufuli of targeting opponents and curbing freedom of the press.
Elected
in 2015, Magufuli came to power as a corruption-fighting "man of the
people" but has been criticised for his authoritarian leadership style.
Tanzania fell 25 places on Reporters Without Borders' World Press Freedom Index this year.
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