Niger has freed an editor-in-chief arrested after his TV news channel aired a programme critical of the ruling junta, the broadcaster told AFP on Monday.
Seyni Amadou, editor-in-chief of private broadcaster Canal 3 TV, was arrested on Saturday, in the latest crackdown on the press since the military took power in a 2023 coup.
His detention came a day after Nigerโs communications minister, Sidi Raliou Mohamed, suspended the channel for a month following Canal 3โs broadcast of a story rating the performance of various members of government.
Mohamed also suspended Amadouโs press card for three months.
โSeyni Amadou has just been freed,โ said Canal 3 TVโs director general Ismael Abdoulaye.
Abdoulaye had previously told AFP that the communications minister had lifted the channel and Amadouโs reporting suspensions.
Having earlier on Monday called for Amadouโs release, media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) welcomed the lifting of the suspensions, which it had branded โillegalโ.
Niger lies 80th out of 180 countries on the 2024 Press Freedom Index published by Paris-based RSF.
Since the army ousted democratically elected president Mohamed Bazoum in 2023, the Sahel country has clamped down on dissent, press freedom and civil society.
In November, another journalist at Canal 3, Serge Mathurin Adou, was detained and later convicted on allegations he attempted to destabilise fellow junta-led Sahel nation Burkina Faso.
The managing director of daily newspaper LโEnqueteur, Idrissa Soumana Maiga, was imprisoned for two months for โundermining national defence,โ before obtaining provisional release in July.
And in September and October 2023, journalist Samira Sabou was arrested before being provisionally released and charged with disseminating data likely to disturb public order.
The junta has also blocked international channels including Radio France Internationale (RFI), France 24 and theย BBC.
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AFP
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