Madagascar has clamped down on reporting on the coronavirus crisis, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has warned, raising fears the pandemic could be used to stifle press freedom.
This month 14 television channels and radio stations were banned from broadcasting content that could “disrupt public order and security” — hindering their ability to report on the health emergency.
Nine shows were suspended, with some only allowed to resume after signing a letter committing not to “harm national unity” or “incite revolt”, RSF said Thursday.
“We should not need to sign a letter of commitment do to our job,” Joel Ralaivoahita, director of the main opposition broadcaster MBS, told AFP on Friday.
He added that the government had not yet asked his organisation to do even that.
RSF noted that several media outlets including MBS were still banned from airing content.
“The public health crisis must not be used as a pretext for prior restrictions on the freedom to inform,” the head of the press organisation’s Africa office Arnaud Froger said in a statement.
“Preventing journalists from working… constitutes censorship and reflects a desire to suppress communication, not to combat the pandemic,” he added.
The presidency has not yet responded to AFP requests for comment.
Madagascar is struggling with surging coronavirus infections, with over 9,900 cases recorded over the past month.
The Indian Ocean island nation of around 27 million people has so far reported 37,014 cases, of which at least 643 have been fatal.
The resurgence prompted President Andry Rajoelina to abandon a hard-line stance against vaccines and agree to a rollout expected to begin next month.
The government had already stifled media reports during the country’s first wave of coronavirus infections last year, banning phone-ins and forcing private broadcasters to air public health messages, according to RSF.