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Reporters Without Borders:
Eritrea 6 July 2007
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Journalist, one of nine arrested last
November, dies in attempt to
flee to Sudan
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Reporters Without Borders voiced deep sadness
today on learning that Paulos Kidane, a
journalist with the Amharic-language service
of state-owned Eri-TV and radio Dimtsi Hafash
(Voice of the Broad Masses) died last month in
an attempt to flee on foot across the border
into Sudan.
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“We join in the mourning of his family and
friends and share their grief in this tragic
ordeal,” the press freedom organization said.
“The information ministry’s lies will not be
able to hide the fact that Kidane was one of
the many victims of a cruel and tyrannical
regime. A hitherto apathetic international
community should react with outrage and hold
President Issaias Afeworki accountable.
”Paulos set off on foot for the border in the
company of seven other Eritreans at the start
of June. Exhausted after six days of walking
and affected by the epilepsy he suffered from,
he had to stop a few kilometers short of the
border and let his companions go on without
him. They left him in a village, hoping he
would subsequently recover enough strength to
resume the trek.There was no news about what
had happened to him for several weeks, until
the Eritrean information ministry informed his
family and state media personnel at the end of
June of his “accidental death." Reporters
Without Borders has the details of the
overland trek undertaken by Paulos and his
companions, including the date of their
departure, the date the rest of the group
crossed the border and their exact route, but
it has decided not to reveal them to avoid
putting anyone in danger. Paulos was one of
nine public media journalists arrested in a
crackdown beginning on 12 November 2006, after
the defection of several prominent
journalists. They were held on suspicion of
staying in contact with the defectors or
planning to flee the country themselves. After
his release a month later, Paulos told
Reporters Without Borders: “We were beaten and
tortured in prison for refusing to give the
passwords to our e-mail accounts. In the end
we cracked because the pain was too much.
”Paulos said they were initially taken to
“Agip,” a police detention centre located near
the presidential palace. They were later held
in an underground prison beneath the No. 5
police station. After being released on bail,
they were followed, their phones were tapped,
they were forced to go back to work and they
were expressly forbidden to leave Asmara." The
government clearly told us that we would be
back in prison if we did not return to work in
the course of the coming week, even if our
salary for the month we spend in their custody
was never paid,” Paulos added. Before the
government eliminated the privately-owned
media in September 2001, Paulos Kidane was the
sports editor of the weekly Admas and wrote
for the weekly Keste Debena. He was one of the
country’s most popular sports journalists and
covered European and world football cup
tournaments. As he had been born in Ethiopia,
he joined the public media’s Amharic-language
service after 2001. One of his friends
described him as “a humble man, not overly
ambitious, known for his jokes and his loud
laugh."
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