Yemen deports foreign journalists

15/03/2011| IslamWeb

Yemeni security forces have raided an apartment shared by four Western journalists and deported them apparently over their coverage of growing anti-government protests in the country.

The expulsions on Monday came amid further demonstrations in the impoverished country.
Oliver Holmes, one of the journalists, said that said that one of the agents told him they were being kicked out because of their coverage of the protests.
"The situation in Yemen has got quite dire in the past three days," said Holmes, a British citizen, speaking by telephone from the airport in Qatar.
"We have all been reporting on the use of violence by the police."
The other journalists who were deported are Haley Sweetland Edwards and Joshua Maricich, both US nationals, and Portia Walker, a British citizen.
Expulsions condemned
Reporters Without Borders condemned the move, noting that two other journalists - Patrick Symmes, a US citizen, and Marco Di Lauro, an Italian photographer - were deported on Saturday.
"The arrests and deportation of foreign journalists are a very worrying sign of nervousness on the part of the authorities," the media rights group said.
Robert Mahoney, the deputy director of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), also condemned the expulsions.
"We call on the authorities to revoke these expulsions and allow all journalists to work freely," he said.
A CPJ statement also quoted two local journalists as saying that a group of 20 people believed to be government supporters went to the Journalists Syndicate in Sanaa Monday and threatened to burn it down.
Separately on Monday, three soldiers were reported killed in the north of Yemen in al-Jawf province, which borders Saudi Arabia, Yemen's state news agency Saba said.
The army there had been deployed to check the nationwide protests demanding the resignation of Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen's president.
Fighting intensified after protesters stormed a municipal building. Security forces fired on them, wounding 10, but could not stop them seizing the building, a local official said.
An Al Jazeera journalist reported that at least five people were wounded when Yemeni security forces fired live bullets and tear gas bombs at camps of protestors who staged a sit-in in the city of Mukalla in Hadramout governorate.
Seven demonstrators and three soldiers have died in clashes since Saturday, raising the death toll from unrest to more than 30.
PHOTO CAPTION
A boy holds Yemen's national flag as he stands among anti-government protesters performing weekly Friday prayers during a rally to demand for the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa March 11, 2011.
Al-Jazeera

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