Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Jamal Khashoggi of Ghana

Investigat­ive journalist Ahmed Hussein-Suale, at the behest of an odious politician, was murdered for exposing corruption, reports writer KWEI QUARTEY

- Kwei Quartey is a crime fiction writer and physician living in Pasadena, Calif. He grew up in Ghana and is perhaps best known for his five Inspector Darko Dawson novels, set in Ghana. This article was first published on his website, kweiquarte­y.com.

Press freedom is a precious commodity everywhere on Earth. Three weeks ago, two men on a motorbike pulled up beside a young Ghanaian reporter, Ahmed Hussein-Suale, in his car and shot him three times at close range. Ahmed died on the spot. He is the first journalist in the world known to be murdered in 2019.

Ahmed worked diligently with the world-renowned investigat­ive journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, who famously never reveals his face behind the iconic “curtain” he wears, and whose axiom is “Name, Shame and Jail.”

Ahmed was a major contributo­r to Mr. Anas’ exposé, in collaborat­ion with the BBC, on corruption in the soccer world, which showed a number of high-profile Ghanaian referees and one FIFA official accepting thousands of dollars in return for match-fixing. Mr. Anas’ company, Tiger Eye PI, has exposed widespread corruption among the Ghanaian judiciary, including the High Court, and has blown a number of social and political scandals wide open. Former U.S. President Barack Obama recognized Mr.

Anas for his courageous work.

Mr. Anas is the also the sort of person people hate. Kennedy Agyapong, a controvers­ial and particular­ly odious minister of Ghana’s parliament, is one of Mr. Anas’ arch-enemies. Mr. Agyapong called the journalist “a blackmaile­r, an extortioni­st.” Mr. Agyapong reportedly also mimed Mr. Anas’ throat being cut and said Mr. Anas should be “hanged.”

Prior to Ahmed’s death, Mr. Agyapong had mounted a relentless, foul-mouthed tirade against the young reporter on TV, radio and social media. Mr. Agyapong, reputed to be one of Ghana’s richest people, owns a radio and TV station, which he used as a platform to demonize Ahmed. On a TV program, Mr. Agyapong showed two pictures of Ahmed, called him a “bad boy,” revealed where Ahmed lived and encouraged people to beat him up if they saw him on the street.

The U.S. embassy in Accra (Ghana’s capital) has denounced the murder, calling for a thorough investigat­ion and stating, “This was not only an attack on Suale, but on Ghana’s climate of transparen­cy, democratic credibilit­y and press freedom.”

According to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Ghana ranked first in Africa and 23rd in the world with a 2018 World Press Freedom Index of 18.4, which is above France (Index 21.9), the U.K. (Index 23.3) and the USA (Index 23.7). Imprisonme­nt of reporters in Ghana is very rare, which makes the murder of one very serious.

Why is the contract-like killing of Ahmed in “remote” Ghana so important? Because an attack on a journalist anywhere should alarm journalist­s everywhere. According to RSF, a total of 80 journalist­s worldwide were killed in 2018, up from 2017. The United States is on the list for the first time because of the shooting of four journalist­s at the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Md. (Two other journalist­s were killed elsewhere in the United States in unrelated events.)

We think of the violent murder and dismemberm­ent of Jamal Khashoggi, a dissident Saudi Arabian and Washington Post columnist who steadfastl­y criticized the Saudi government and advocated for Saudi women’s rights. Time magazine named a group of journalist­s, including the murdered Khashoggi, as its person of the year for 2018, “honoring their dedicated pursuit of the truth despite a war on facts and tremendous obstacles, including violence and imprisonme­nt.”

Kennedy Agyapong’s chilling appearance on Ghanaian TV in which he “outed” Ahmed HusseinSua­le and encouraged people in his neighborho­od to beat him up is as dangerous as it is boorish. But let’s not forget that U.S. President Donald J. Trump, who has an obsession with underminin­g members of the media, condoned violence perpetrate­d on a reporter.

In the fall of 2018, the very targets of Donald Trump’s incendiary attacks became bomb targets, including CNN, which Mr. Trump says is another “fake news” outlet.

The assassinat­ion of Ahmed reminds us that inciting words against the press by a public figure can set a tone in which violence against members of the press is tolerated. This is a reality all over the world. Journalism must not die, and journalist­s must have the freedom to continue telling the truth.

The notion of fact being stranger than fiction, or “art imitating life,” can be clichéd, but it does seem to happen to me and in my writing quite a bit. Long before the tragedy of Ahmed, I had completed the second draft of my upcoming novel, “The Missing American,” in which an investigat­ive journalist based on Mr. Anas barely escapes assassinat­ion. Indeed, the real Anas has had so many death threats, it’s hard to keep up. The attack on journalism in a novel is all very well, but in real life it is ominous.

 ?? Reuters ?? Ahmed Hussein-Suale
Reuters Ahmed Hussein-Suale

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