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Swedish reporters plan prison protest

Published: 1 Oct 11 16:24 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/36476/20111001/

Two Swedish journalists are planning to go to jail of their own accord in a bid to draw attention to the plight of other writers in captivity.

John Wirfält and his colleague Sara Murillo Cortes plan to be incarcerated at the Kronoberg facility in Kungsholmen, Stockholm, to raise awareness of the ongoing cases involving Dawit Isaak, Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson and also to openly criticise the government for not doing more to get them released.

Swedish-Eritrean journalist Dawit Isaak has been held in an Eritrean prison since 2001 without trial and is considered a traitor by the Eritrean government.

Amnesty International has highlighted his case frequently and has called for his immediate and unconditional release.

Freelance reporters Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson have been held in an Ethiopian jail since the beginning of July, facing terrorist charges.

The two Swedish journalists were allegedly in the country investigating Lundin Petroleum, a Swedish oil and mining company, at the time they were arrested together with members of the ONLF guerilla, according to reports in the Swedish media.

Wirfält told daily Dagens Nyheter (DN), ”This is a new way to draw further attention to the imprisoned Swedish journalists Dawit Isaak, Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson. We want to show our criticism of the foreign ministry, which has been the case with Dawit for several years, but also in the second case (Schibbye and Persson). We also want to highlight the vulnerable situation that freelance journalists find themselves in when they go out without having the back-up of an editorial team.”

He added that they are hoping many more journalists will join in with their action, claiming that 40 others have already pledged their support.

The protesting pair plan their prison stay sometime before October 15, when the trial of Schibbye and Persson is set to take place in Ethiopia.

The Local/gm (news@thelocal.se)

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17:08 October 1, 2011 by Opinionfool
The BBC's Friday night comedy quiz QI had a question concerning the Pulitzer employed journalist Nellie Blythe (aka Elizabeth Jane Cochran) who faked mental illness to get into an asylum in order to report on the horrific conditions inside. To be imprisoned in a nice effette European jail, even voluntarily, isn't going to make any significant protest. Might make them celebrities for a while in Sweden but the plight of the two prisoners in Ethopia won't be altered by it.
17:50 October 1, 2011 by Svensksmith
Heck, I've been thinking about voluntary incarceration myself. Free room and board, TVs in every room, an exercise facility, medical and dental care. Beats working.
18:03 October 1, 2011 by Cornelius Hamelberg
What " opinionfool" says makes a lot of sense.

We must distinguish between Ethiopia and Eritrea.

Maybe we should give the usual quiet diplomacy a chance. What we shouldn't be doing right now is making too much noise about Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson - because that way - confrontation - by which we want to make right out of wrong, might get the Ethiopians' backs up and may put the Ethiopian Government in a position from which they would not like to back down or lose face, insisting on their sovereign territorial rights.

In 1978, I was about to set foot on Finnish soil for the umpteenth time and without a Swedish passport (I had been to Ruisrock a few times a few years earlier,and with no passport control in sight ) but this time I found myself on the same boat back to Stockholm with the Visa Control man's words still ringing in my ears: "Do you think that this is Sweden?"

When it comes to Dawit Isaak, in the eyes of the Eritrean Authorities - even if that authority is all concentrated into the hands of one man, he who personifies authority in the land, namely President Isaias Afewerki - in his eyes and in the eyes and many of his sympathisers including many of the Eritrean-Swedes, there is a significant difference between the the born Swedes Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson and the Eritrean home boy Dawit Isaak. Isaak's Swedish passport not withstanding, on Eritrean soil he is supposed to be loyal to Eritrea and not to be perceived as working for Swedish interests only. I gather that their view is that an ordinary Swedish passport is not enough to give him diplomatic immunity.....

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/05/SwedishPassportVisas.PNG
22:59 October 1, 2011 by jostein
I dont know about Dawit Isaak but the rest of these vermin belong in jail. Swedish "journalists" are vile creatures.
01:28 October 2, 2011 by Uncle
Eritrea took the 175th place out of possible 175 in Media freedom according to reporters without borders. Right after North Korea.

Dawit was supporting the war of Eritrea against the "evil" Ethiopia with a high amount of patriotism. Probably re-thinking his opinions when forced to pick a soap up the floor whenever his cellmate Ahmed Ibn Jihad wishes so, after his beloved revolutinaries decided that he was too much of a hassle when writing against THEM.

He took the risk. He lost in his gamble. "Attention to imprisoned journalist" would not assist to remove the "freedom fighters" that are in charge there. I understand the actions of Sweden, but seriously, going TO these countries to write wonderful articles against these governments is equal to playing a russian roulette with 5 bullets in the chamber. Big boy. Pays for being an idiot.
11:31 October 2, 2011 by motti
what soft choice nonsense. They should visit their friends in Gaza and allow Hamas to be theirjailors or at least their "contacts."
15:17 October 2, 2011 by Cornelius Hamelberg
The Great Uncle,

How unforgettably you explain Dawit's predicament !

No easier said than done. It should be easier to move than to remove the "freedom fighters" that are in charge there."

Easier to move them to make their hearts more acceptable to some compassionate influence, even financially induce or convince them - your money or your wife ? Pay them some ransom money, don't treat Afewerk any better than a Somali Pirate but don't insult him - some of the Ethiopians say insults are specially reserved for Mengistu and his donkey.

Easier to induce them to granting clemency to a double agent than to remove the "Freedom Fighters".

What you say the Swedish journalists instead of incarcerating themselves for free in some luxurious prison hotel, could form a commando unit to bring back Dawit?

Then they'd probably wind up facing terrorist charges just like Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson.(I almost wrote Göran Persson).

And then we'd be back to square one and maybe have to send more journalists.

Re-inforcements.

Another commando unit. Or to voluntary imprisonment in protest as a way of extending awareness about the matter

If only one or two of them could have the fortitude to overcome gastronomical temptations for a while, abandon life in voluntary, luxurious freedom and go on a hunger strike instead.

Put their mouth where their stomach is.

Great Uncle, it's being said that it's Addis that's keeping Asmara in power, and Addis is living life without that Eritrean Port ...And grudges about Bad-me and other lost territories now completely under Eritrean occupation ha ha after 29 years.....

It would probably take much more than 29 years to topple the first generation of the Eritrean Revolution....
17:57 October 7, 2011 by Munir Ahmed
Send them to jail in Ethiopia, they can join the other two Swedish clowns...I mean, "reporters."

Ogaden (ONLF) Islamic terrorist massacres, ignored by $$$ hungry Swedish reporters:

BBC:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/6588055.stm

REUTERS:

http://af.reuters.com/article/ethiopiaNews/idAFLDE74D0CU
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