The US state department has highlighted the unresolved disappearance of Minivan News journalist Ahmed Rilwan in a campaign ahead of international press freedom day on May 3.
Acting spokesperson Marie Harf called on the Maldives to “credibly investigate the disappearance” during a press briefing in Washington DC on Wednesday.
.@marieharf highlights 2 cases of threats against freedom of expression in #Crimea and #Maldives. #FreeThePress http://t.co/wgEERTtpLI
— Department of State (@StateDept) April 29, 2015
Gov. of Maldives needs to credibly investigate the disappearance of Ahmed Rilwan & create space for ind. journalists http://t.co/HZahIeKis0
— Human Rights @ State (@State_DRL) April 29, 2015
Rilwan is believed to have been abducted at knifepoint outside his apartment building in a Malé suburb in the early morning of August 8. The 28-year-old reporter wrote on politics, criminal gangs and Islamic extremism.
Rilwan had received clear threats to his life in the weeks prior to his disappearance, and an investigative report by a local human rights group has implicated radicalised gangs in the abduction.
Harf called on the government “to take the steps necessary to create space for independent journalists to work without fear of violence or harassment, including ending impunity for attacks and intimidation against journalists.”
Investigative journalist Ahmed Rilwan has remained disappeared since August 2014 #Maldives http://t.co/HZahIeKis0 pic.twitter.com/ZX9gjAwV6V
— Human Rights @ State (@State_DRL) April 29, 2015
Police investigations has been slow despite nine months passing since the disappearance was reported.
In a statement last week, the police said they are continuing with the investigation, and have received some forensic analysis reports of samples from three different cars that may have been used in the abduction.
“The investigative team is now reviewing how we may continue with the investigation based on the results of some of the forensic analysis reports,” the April 23 statement said.
In October last year, the police arrested five individuals over the disappearance, but all have been released. Local media reported that several suspects left the Maldives in January, ostensibly for the war effort in Syria.
Home minister Umar Naseer has also acknowledged the involvement of gangs in Rilwan’s disappearance.
His family has accused the police of negligence, saying officers failed to stop and search the car used in the abduction, despite eye witnesses having filed a report with the police immediately after observing the abduction.
Police officers had reportedly confiscated a knife from the scene.
Maldives journalists have repeatedly raised concerns over death threats to the press by Malé’s criminal gangs, but the police have failed to take substantive action against threats.
In March, local media cited a blog and reported that Rilwan had died fighting against the Islamic State in Kurdistan. However, the police said the blog was fake.
More proof that nobody listens to Dunya Maumoon's press releases from the foreign affairs ministry.