Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Attack on transmission center silences Haitian radios
By Amy Bracken PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Armed men attacked several independent Haitian radio stations on Tuesday, smashed transmission systems and forced them off the air, a guard and staff at the stations said. Staff at some of the affected stations blamed government supporters for the attacks, however, there was no definitive information on the identities of attackers or their motives. In the past supporters of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide have threatened independent radio stations and have harassed and attacked journalists. Government officials were not immediately available to comment. UHF and microwave equipment used by seven radio stations, one television station and the communications system of a bank were destroyed in the attack at the transmission center at La Boule, in the mountains above Port-au-Prince. The guard, Bremar Vil, said that nine armed men drove up in a four-wheel drive vehicle, tied him up and asked him where they could find the transmitting machines for one independent radio station, Radio Caraibes. Vil said he told them he did not know and the men then smashed all the equipment with batons. One radio station and the television station whose equipment was damaged are government-affiliated but the other radio stations are all independent. For some of the stations, the equipment at La Boule was the only way of getting on air. Lilian Pierre-Paul, director of Radio Kiskaya, said she thought the government was at fault because of its criticisms of the independent media. The independent media have actively reported rising protests against Aristide by opponents who accuse the president of mismanagement and corruption. "I was shocked because despite everything we never believed it would come to this," said Anne Marie Issa, the director general of Signal FM, one of the radio stations silenced. Issa said that like other independent radio stations, hers had received threats. She was skeptical there would an official investigation into the attack. Aristide is facing almost daily street protests by the opposition in a three-year political stalemate sparked by a dispute over the results of parliamentary elections in 2000. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|