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DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO

Freed DRC journalist says he was imprisoned as warning to others

Prominent Congolese journalist Stanis Bujakera, released from prison this week after spending six months behind bars, has accused the government of fabricating the charges against him as part of a campaign to intimidate reporters looking into the death of an opposition politician.

Congolese journalist Stanis Bujakera the day after his release, in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, on 20 March 2024.
Congolese journalist Stanis Bujakera the day after his release, in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, on 20 March 2024. © Patient Ligodi / RFI
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Bujakera, who is deputy director of the Actualite.cd news site and a regular contributor to RFI and international outlets, said that he had been targeted by the state for reporting on the death of Cherubin Okende

A former minister and spokesman for the opposition party Ensemble pour la République ("Together for the Republic"), Okende disappeared on 12 July last year.

His bullet-riddled body was found in his car in Kinshasa the following day.

Bujakera was arrested in September over a report that appeared in French magazine Jeune Afrique about the possible involvement of the country's intelligence bureau, based on a leaked confidential memo.

Though the magazine said Bujakera was not the author of the story, he was charged with spreading falsehoods and forging documents and jailed awaiting trial. 

He was found guilty earlier this month, and sentenced to time served and a fine of 1 million Congolese francs (around 330 euros). He was finally released on 19 March.

'Totally fabricated'

Speaking to RFI in his first interview as a free man, Bujakera described the pressure on him to reveal his sources, and the pressure on the judges to convict him.

"They wanted to convict me to scare other journalists," he told RFI's Christophe Boisbouvier.

"There was nothing right in the case against me, so it's a totally fabricated affair. Totally fabricated to try to intimidate us."

Bujakera's arrest came three months before presidential elections in the DRC and "the authorities wanted to control information", he maintains.

Dangerous information

Bujakera told RFI that he had no plans to appeal the conviction until he had faith that DRC's justice system was truly independent.

Meanwhile former minister of tourism Modero Nsimba appeared in court in Kinshasa this week, to face charges of propagating rumours against the family of President Felix Tshisekedi in the wake of Okende's death.

His arrest came after the sharing of controversial audio recordings regarding the alleged murder on social networks.

Okende was buried this week in Kinshasa. The Congolese judiciary still insists he died by suicide.

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(with newswires)

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