11/14/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/15/2024 10:43
As Senegal approaches its legislative elections on 17 November, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) urges the parliamentary candidates to commit to restoring full press freedom in the country. RSF calls on all future MPs to adopt four priority reforms as soon as they take office to protect journalists and promote the right to information.
Despite a marked improvementsince the arrival of the new government last April, journalism remains a difficult endeavour in Senegal. Journalistshave been summoned for questioning, media outlets face serious economic difficulties andthe lack of dialoguebetween the authorities and the media has created many challenges for the press.RSF calls on all future members of parliament to pass groundbreaking laws to restore press freedom in Senegal.
As Senegal's future MPs will have the great responsibility of reconciling the National Assembly with the people, it is crucial that they fully restore press freedom in the country. Too many journalists have been imprisoned on spurious grounds, assaulted in the course of their work or cyber-harassed because of their publications or opinions. The economic difficulties faced by the media - and the close ties that some of them have with political figures - are not conducive to creating a healthy media ecosystem. Parliamentarians take urgent measures to give the public a genuine right to information. RSF calls on MPs to carry out four priority reforms as soon as they take office, starting with a vote to abolish custodial sentences for press offences and to pass a law on access to information of public interest.
In June, RSF published "Senegalese journalism at a crossroads", a report that includes thirty recommendations to protect journalists, journalists, improve media pluralism, and fight disinformation in Senegal.
Today, RSF is specifically addressing future members of parliament, urging them to commit to four priority reforms: