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Tuesday April 16, 2024

Veteran Sudan journalist sees more pressure than ever

KHARTOUM: He has been a journalist in Sudan for six difficult decades, but with his country’s press facing mounting pressure and censorship, Mahjoub Mohamed Salih says his job has never been so difficult.A reporter since before Sudan’s 1956 independence from Britain and Egypt, the 88-year-old founder of independent daily al-Ayam

By our correspondents
June 30, 2015
KHARTOUM: He has been a journalist in Sudan for six difficult decades, but with his country’s press facing mounting pressure and censorship, Mahjoub Mohamed Salih says his job has never been so difficult.
A reporter since before Sudan’s 1956 independence from Britain and Egypt, the 88-year-old founder of independent daily al-Ayam has been arrested, banned from publishing and even seen his newspaper nationalised.
But never, he says, have he and other journalists had to deal with as much pressure as now.
“This is the most difficult period to work as a journalist,” Salih says, wearing traditional white Sudanese robes and a turban as he speaks to AFP from his run-down office in central Khartoum.
Sudan’s National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) have launched two sweeping press crackdowns this year, raiding printing presses and confiscating all copies of 14 newspapers on February 16.
Media watchdog Reporters without Borders (RSF) said the “massive and indiscriminate seizures constitute an unacceptable act of censorship”.
Critics tied the seizures to elections in April that saw President Omar al-Bashir win another five-year term.
Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on war crimes charges over the conflict in Darfur, has been repeatedly accused of cracking down on opponents.
But in May security agents seized copies of another 10 newspapers, apparently after they reported cases of child abuse on school buses, and temporarily banned four from publishing.
The NISS rarely gives explanations for its seizures.
Salih is no stranger to run-ins with Sudanese authorities.
He has been detained more times than he can remember, banned from publishing for two years in the 1950s, and his newspaper was nationalised for 16 years from 1970.
Instead of seeing hoped-for improvements in the country’s press climate, he still worries every day.
“I keep my fingers crossed that tomorrow morning I don’t get a telephone call telling me that my newspaper has not reached the reader,” he says.
Salih’s newspaper has been confiscated less often than some others, but fear of the financial losses he could suffer has made him cut his circulation to just 3,000 copies per day.
He estimates that newspapers with a wider circulation of 20,000 per day could lose up to 30,000 Sudanese pounds per confiscation, a significant sum in a country where most newspapers sell for just two Sudanese pounds. Sudanese reporters have worked under strict surveillance since Bashir seized power in a 1989 Islamist-backed coup.