Liberian NewsUncategorised

“Weird criminal coercion court action against Journalists” in Rivercess- PUL says

(Last Updated On: )

The Press Union of Liberia (PUL) says “it is monitoring a weird criminal coercion court action against

Journalist Eric Oldpa Duoe and two others in Yarpah Township, Rivercess County.”

Rivercess is in southeastern Liberia, some 155 kilometers from Monrovia.

 

A PUL statement says last Thursday, sheriffs from a Magisterial Court in Cestos served a writ of arrest on Journalists Oldpa Duoe, Saturday Jududoe and Stanley Wrehdhu for criminal coercion for alleged deformation against an individual identified by the court as Private Prosecutor, Victor Wilson.

 

Mr. Eric Oldpa Duoe, Saturday Jududoe and Stanley Wrehdhu are all employees of ECHO Radio of Yarpah Town Rivercess County.

 

The Magisterial Court’s Writ of Arrest alleged that the reporters “without any color of law, criminally, maliciously, and intentionally published on the media outlet of the ECHO Radio, fictitious and accusation that the Private Prosecutor did engage into the sale of a yellow machine which according to the defendants, during their radio talk-shows, and other programs, actually belongs to the people of River Cess.

 

The Press Union of Liberia views the court’s action against members of the Journalism Community in Liberia as the commencement of a ploy to intimidate journalists in the south- central region of Liberia through an awkward legal form of action.

 

It is unacceptable that the rights of journalists and media workers are continuously being violated through different court actions, the Union stresses.

On Monday, 9th April, the Office of FrontPage Africa (FPA) was raided on the orders of authorities of a Monrovia Civil Law Court when sheriffs arrested all the papers’ employees including cleaners and an expediter.

Meanwhile, the Press Union of Liberia is most respectfully drawing the attention of the Supreme Court of Liberia and the Liberia National Bar Association to the situation in Rivercess.

 

Liberia signed the Table Mountain Declaration on 21, July 2012 vowing to repeal criminal defamation or ‘insult’ laws. Almost six years on, journalists are still being harassed, frightened and persecuted by meanly political leaders of the country using criminal defamation as means of silencing critical voices.

You Might Be Interested In

Actors @ EU-held forum in Monrovia stress need to Maximize media power for public good

News Public Trust

Number Of Journalists Jailed Worldwide Hits Record Amid Unrest, Pandemic

News Public Trust

Sharp Rise In Diabetes Clashing With COVID-19 In Africa

News Public Trust