OFFICIALS SPEAK OUT ON MEDIA FREEDOM, IGGA TO ACT

Hellen Achayo | April 13, 2017 | 1:37 pmVice President James Wani Igga.
Photo/paanluelwel

One minister says the media is silent on dialogue over fear of arrest or
shutdown, another official says security organs are heavy-handed, and VP
James Wani Igga pledges to address the media freedom challenges.

The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs says there is need to give media
freedom to allow it give information about the national dialogue to the
public.Hussein Maar Nyuot says the media has been quite due to fear of
arrest and shut down.He says the media is the most important tool that can
enable everyone to understand the process of the national dialogue.

Mr. Maar was speaking during a presentation on the national dialogue by the
government yesterday.“There is that fear that whoever writes an article to
be published on features of individuals, you will be subjected to arrest,
and peace has come to the country!” Mr Maar said.“The president made it
very clear and he started it with the national prayers that we conducted
very well with the steering committee. Now we are moving to national
dialogue. The media is quiet; people don’t talk about it until it is said
by somebody. I think this is very dangerous because mobilization of the
public needs a prerequisite before we even sit for the national dialogue,”
he said.“It should happen now that the newspapers, the radios, whether
private or the national radios, the TVs and all these should come out with
a message that the national dialogue could come in. But, your Excellency,
[it will not happen] until we call a spade is a spade,” he addressed his
concern to Vice President James Wani Igga.

At the same occasion, the Chairperson of the Lands Commission, Robert Ladu,
said there is need to check on the security sector to allow transparency
and open discussion.He spoke as a member of the National Liberation
Council.“The second thing is for us to be transparent and to discuss openly
because it is an open secret that the country is in a state of decay. We
need to check on our security operators,” Mr. Ladu said.“The security
extends not to those who work in it but If I have to extort money from
somebody and I have a security man, I use the security to threaten him.
Even to address this one issue, even if someone is competing over women, I
used the security to threaten him. So this is a very dangerous thing. So
this is a very dangerous thing,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Minister of Roads and Bridges, Rebecca Joshua Okwachi, says
despite the challenges in the sector, the media need to do more to inform
people.“The issue of the media and I would like to challenge my colleagues
the journalists in terms of media. Our media is a big problem. I know there
is a cry, we are being cracked down, this is happening and we have been
talkingof the role of other institutions,” Ms. Okwaci said.“But I am not
seeing anything in the media. As a professional journalist, I am sorry I am
not seeing anything happening, even newspapers, who will be buying now? I
don’t know whether it is training or what,” she said.“Some of them are
private but also let us start from inside also our media. During the
revolution, only two hours and we were shaking the whole world. Even
Khartoum was running,” she added.

In response, Vice President Dr. James Wani Igga, said a schedule will be
draw to sensitize and caution security organs.“Number one is that we have
to caution and sensitize our security,” Dr. Igga said.“You are right,” Dr.
Igga responded concerns of lack of media freedom. “Actually, I am drawing
out a schedule which will include going to the state and to the different
departments and institutions, the different organs of national security and
so on. We will actually have to address that,” he said.Vice President Dr.
James Wani Igga presented the progress on the national dialogue.

Magdoline Joseph contributed to this report

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