PARIS (Reporters Without Borders / Pacific Media Watch): British journalists Rebecca Prosser and Neil Bonner have been sentenced to two and a half months in prison on a charge of violating Indonesia’s immigration law, reports Reporters Without Borders.
Having already been held for more than twice that time, they are due to be freed shortly.
Detained by the immigration authorities on the western island of Batam since late May, Rebecca Prosser and Neil Bonner were found guilty this week by the Batam district court that began examining their case in September.
“We are relieved to learn that Rebecca Prosser and Neil Bonner will soon be released,” said Benjamin Ismaïl, head of the Reporters Without Borders (RSF/RWB) Asia-Pacific desk.
“Nonetheless, their conviction by this court confirms Indonesia’s troubling tendency to treat journalists as criminals when all they have done is violate a regulation. How can locking up journalists for long periods like criminals be regarded as justice? The law on foreign journalists’ visas must be repeated.”
Prosser and Bonner, who work for the Wall to Wall production company, entered Indonesia on tourist visas and were arrested by the Indonesian Navy on May 28 while filming a reenactment of pirates storming an oil tanker for a documentary commissioned by National Geographic.
Indonesia is ranked 138th out of 180 countries in the 2015 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 New Zealand Licence.