On 17 September 2002,
Togolese President
Gnassingbé Eyadéma tried to stop the broadcasting of an interview with one of his opponents,
Agbéyomé Kodjo, by phoning directly to the
Elysée Palace. The interview was not
censored by
Jean-Paul Cluzel, RFI's CEO at the time, due to the coordinated intervention of the journalists' trade unions. However, a report raising questions regarding the
French secret services responsibilities in the 1995 death of judge
Bernard Borrel in
Djibouti, which was broadcast on 17 May 2005, was later removed from RFI's website for undisclosed reasons, possibly due to the intervention of Djiboutian President
Ismail Omar Guelleh. On 21 October 2003,
Jean Hélène was reporting for RFI during the
civil war in
Ivory Coast when he was killed in
Abidjan by police sergeant Théodore Séry Dago. On 2 November 2013, RFI reporting team
Ghislaine Dupont and
Claude Verlon were murdered while covering the
Mali elections. The
United Nations set their death date to commemorate the
International Day of Impunity each year. In November 2020, RFI mistakenly published numerous obituaries of famous people on its own web site, as well as sending them to related web sites, after moving draft stories to a new system. The government of
Niger suspended two state-owned media outlets (
France 24 and the RFI) following the
2023 Nigerien coup d'état. ==Podcasts==