Cameroon is one of the continent’s most dangerous countries for journalists.

.webp&w=3840&q=75)
Yaoundé: The mutilated body of a prominent Cameroonian journalist has been found near the capital Yaounde, five days after he was abducted by unidentified assailants.
Martinez Zogo, director of private radio station Amplitude FM, was kidnapped on January 17 as he tried to enter a police station to escape his attackers, media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said.
Zogo, presenter of the well-known daily program Embouteillage (Gridlock), had recently been talking on-air about a case of alleged embezzlement involving a media outlet with government connections, RSF said.
On the air, the 51-year-old regularly tackled cases of corruption, not hesitating to question important personalities by name.
According to RSF, police in a Yaounde suburb heard a loud noise outside their police station and found Zogo’s badly damaged car at approximately 8pm (19:00 GMT) on Tuesday.
“Police saw a black vehicle… driving off. They later came to realize this was an abduction,” the organization said.
Zogo’s colleague, Charlie Amie Tchouemou, editor-in-chief of Amplitude FM, confirmed Zogo’s abduction and subsequent death. The police and the government have not commented yet.
‘Victim of hatred and barbarism’
Media advocates described his disappearance and death as a further sign of the perils of reporting in the African country.
“Cameroonian media has just lost one of its members, a victim of hatred and barbarism,” the Cameroon Journalists’ Trade Union said in a statement.
“Where is the freedom of the press, freedom of opinion and freedom of expression in Cameroon when working in the media now entails a mortal risk?”
The incident is the latest in a string of attacks against journalists in Cameroon, which is ruled by President Paul Biya, who has a decades-long record of repressing opposition.
Cameroon is one of many countries across the continent, from Burkina Faso to Ethiopia to Equatorial Guinea, where journalists say media freedoms are under threat from authoritarian governments.
“Although Cameroon has one of the richest media landscapes in Africa, it is one of the continent’s most dangerous countries for journalists, who operate in a hostile and precarious environment,” RSF says in its Cameroon country profile.
In July 2015, Radio France Internationale reporter Ahmed Abba was arrested and imprisoned for two years on “terrorism” charges that rights groups denounced as a sham.
Outspoken reporter Paul Chouta, who worked for the private news website Cameroon Web, was beaten and stabbed by unknown attackers in 2019.
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

A Democratic senator on the fights his party has to pick
- an hour ago
200,000 tons of hoarded wheat seized across Punjab
- 10 hours ago
WhatsApp tests new threaded replies to organize group chats
- 9 hours ago

Dabo defends record following 1-2 start, poll exit
- 2 hours ago

Spotify’s free users can finally play the songs they want
- 3 hours ago

Steelers likely to adjust after gaffe; Highsmith out
- 2 hours ago

Sony’s new Xperia phone jumps on the camera bar bandwagon
- 3 hours ago

Our hottest takes on AI’s wild summer
- 3 hours ago

Why is Trump suing the New York Times?
- an hour ago

Trump asks the Supreme Court to give him total control over the US economy
- an hour ago

Trump says foreign workers are ‘welcome’ after ICE raid in Georgia targets hundreds of South Koreans
- 3 hours ago
Pakistan set 147-run target for UAE in Asia Cup clash
- 10 hours ago