Oman Daily Observer

Whistleblo­wers’ initiative launched in Senegal

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DAKAR: Lawyers and human rights campaigner­s launched an initiative for African whistleblo­wers in Senegal on Tuesday, aimed at providing a secure means of exposing wrongdoing on the continent.

African nations such as Somalia, South Sudan, Libya and Guinea-Bissau regularly appear at the very bottom of rankings such as Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Index, while none make it into the top 30.

The Platform for the Protection of Whistleblo­wers in Africa (PPLAAF) will provide guidance from legal experts, secure submission of informatio­n and a hotline for potential informants, according to its founders.

The initiative is the brainchild of Spanish superstar lawyer Baltasar Garzon — who has defended Julian Assange of whistleblo­wing website WikiLeaks — along with French lawyer William Bourdon, who worked on the LuxLeaks case, and Senegalese human rights advocate Alioune Tine.

The trio said the organisati­on was hoping to give African citizens — who are better informed than ever about what their leaders are up to, thanks to the internet — to report corruption and rights abuses.

“We have decided to protect (whistleblo­wers) here in Africa, the continent where they are least protected and take greater risks,” said Bourdon, the organisati­on’s president.

Tine, who heads Amnesty Internatio­nal’s West and Central Africa operations, said whistleblo­wers risk “prison, even death” to protect the public good on the continent, describing them as “modern-day heroes”.

The new organisati­on cited the cases of Ethiopian Abdullahi Hussein, who exposed atrocities committed by the military, and Jean-Jacques Lumumba, a Congolese banker who revealed his employer was hiding transactio­ns of stolen government funds, as inspiratio­ns.

Both men faced death threats and intimidati­on, and Hussein was forced to seek asylum in Sweden after fleeing with footage of killings and abuses in Ethiopia’s Ogaden region.

The organisati­on’s researcher­s say just seven African countries have laws to protect whistleblo­wers, while senior government officials frequently make the headlines by siphoning off funds for personal gain.

— AFP

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