SECTOR 1

1.5 Print publications are not required to obtain
permission to publish from state authorities.
All newspapers require to publish as a bon de diffusion – a paper that serves
as proof that the publication has been declared at the state counsel’s office.
However, there are administrative formalities that must be fulfilled to make the
declaration valid: Art 35 of the “Freedom of Communication and Media Law”.
And, even though the bon de diffusion represents some kind of authorisation,
it is widely viewed as not constituting a repressive requirement. Congo has
also abolished its censorship law, which required a public official to validate a
publication before it went to press.
As a result, the newspaper industry is flourishing numerically. There are believed
to be more than 50 newspapers officially exiting in the country, most of them
serving Brazzaville and Pointe-Noire, the major cities.

Scores:
Individual scores:
1

Country does not meet indicator

2

Country meets only a few aspects of indicator

3

Country meets some aspects of indicator

4

Country meets most aspects of indicator

5

Country meets all aspects of the indicator

Average score:

4.8

1.6 Confidential sources of information are protected
by law and/or the courts.
Congolese media law is rather contradictory on the protection of sources. Article
99 of the “Freedom of Information and Communication Law” states that “the
protection of sources of information is guaranteed”. But this guarantee could
be retrieved by Article 227 of the same law. The latter article requires journalists
to produce “witnesses” during a libel defence, otherwise their reporting is
considered their own invention. Legal experts warn that broadly defined, such
witnesses could include confidential sources. In several cases, journalists have
indeed been forced to produce their sources to testify in chambers. In a few
known cases, sources opted to come forward to help journalists’ defence.

AFRICAN MEDIA BAROMETER REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO 2013

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