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Pius Njawé : ウィキペディア英語版
Pius Njawé

Pius Njawé (4 March 1957 – 12 July 2010) was a Cameroonian journalist and director of ''Le Messager'' as well as ''Le Messager Populi.'' Arrested over 100 times for his reporting, Njawé won several awards for his work, including the 1991 CPJ International Press Freedom Award and the 1993 Golden Pen of Freedom. In 2000, he was named one of International Press Institute's fifty World Press Freedom Heroes of the previous fifty years. In Njawé's obituary, the ''New York Times'' described him as "a symbol of opposition to the autocratic regime of Paul Biya".〔
== Life ==
Njawé was born in Babouantou, Cameroon, on 4 March 1957. As a child, he sold newspapers in the street before going on to work for the state-owned newspapers ''La Gazette'' and the daily ''Douala Express''.〔 In 1979, at the age of 22, he founded the nation's first independent newspaper, ''Le Messager''.〔
The paper soon became known for its criticism of long-time President Paul Biya, and it drew a strong government response. Njawé was arrested for the first time in 1981, and would go on to be arrested about 125 more times before his death.〔 In 1990, ''Le Messager'' was briefly seized by the government for its reporting on a riot.〔 In 1990, Njawé's publishing of an "open letter" to Biya led to another arrest.
The paper was banned in 1992, forcing Njawé into a short exile in Benin, where he continued to publish.〔 Njawé returned to the country in February 1993 despite being accused by the government of drug dealing, counterfeiting, and sedition; he founded the Cameroon Organization for Press Freedom one month later.〔 In 1996, he was imprisoned on charges of "insulting the president and members of the National Assembly".〔
In 1998, Njawé was sentenced to two years in prison when ''Le Messager'' ran an article suggesting that Biya had a heart condition. The sentence for running this article was later reduced, and due to pressures from Human Rights groups, Njawé was pardoned after almost a year in prison. His wife had miscarried in the interim, reportedly due to mistreatment by prison guards. Njawé wrote a book about his prison experience titled ''Bloc-notes d'un Bagnard'' ("Notebooks of a Convict"), which he published in 1998.〔
Njawé's wife Jane was killed in a car accident in September 2002, causing him to found an organisation calling for safer road conditions in Cameroon. He had eight children.〔
Shortly before his own death in a car accident, Njawé told an interviewer that "A word can be more powerful than a weapon and I believe that with the word... we can build a better world and make happier people. So, why give up while duty still calls? No one will silence me, except The Lord, before I achieve what I consider as a mission in my native country, in Africa and, why not, in the world."〔

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