2005-2014

12 January 2006

Changes at work in journalism affecting quality of coverage

A new report has highlighted a worldwide trend of experienced senior staff being replaced by younger graduates who are often employed on a casual or freelance basis and on less pay. The report –The Changing Nature of Work: A Global Survey – polled 41 journalists' organisations in 38 countries that are affiliated to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), including the All-India...

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11 January 2006

Forest ranger held for killing scribe in Assam

GUWAHATI, JANUARY 10: The ranger of the Nambor reserved forest, K Z Zaman Jinnah, was arrested for allegedly murdering journalist Prahlad Goala of Assamese daily Asomiya Khabar in Golaghat on Friday last. Goala had reported on illegal felling of trees in the forest range. Goala, the Golaghat district correspondent of the daily, was reportedly killed by unidentified assailants who waylaid him at...

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11 January 2006

The night the Americans came: Iraqi report's first-hand account

Last weekend an American special task force unit raided my house. It was precisely the kind of terrifying experience I have had described to me over and over again by Iraqis I have interviewed in the past two-and-a-half years. My wife, Zina, described it as like something out of a Hollywood action movie. It began at half past midnight on Saturday when explosives blew apart the three entrances to...

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11 January 2006

Al Jazeera: From Network, to a Bush Target, to Courts

LONDON, Jan. 10 - A British civil servant and a former researcher appeared in court on Tuesday in the latest skirmish of an unfolding legal battle over claims that President Bush proposed bombing Al Jazeera's television headquarters. Mr. Bush's reported remarks were disclosed in a leaked document, the contents of which were published in a British newspaper late last year. The comments raised...

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11 January 2006

Swiss journalists may face 5-yr jail term in CIA case

Military prosecutors in Switzerland have opened an investigation into a newspaper editor and two journalists for having published news of a secret fax which appears to confirm allegations of CIA secret prisons in Europe, Italian news agency Adnkronos International (AKI) has reported. GOING TO THE POLE: The airport in Szymany, Poland, identified by Human Rights Watch as a potential site of alleged...

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11 January 2006

Widow of slain Ukraine journalist Gongadze blasts investigation

MOSCOW, January 11 (RIA Novosti) - The widow of a Ukrainian investigative journalist whose murder became a focal point in the "orange revolution" that swept new authorities to power in 2004 said Wednesday she was unhappy with how the investigation into his killing was proceeding. Myroslava Gongadze, whose husband Heorhiy vanished in 2000 before his headless body was later found in a forest, told...

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11 January 2006

Norway mag stokes Muslim ire with prophet cartoons

A Norwegian Christian magazine has published a set of controversial caricatures of the prophet Mohammed after months of uproar in the Muslim world over a Danish paper's decision to print the same cartoons, according to Al-Jazeera. LIGHT HIS FIRE: Danish preacher Moses Hansen heads a Christian demonstration in the street in Copenhagen Tuesday, January 10. Denmark's prime minister Tuesday accused a

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11 January 2006

China's first mobile phone newspaper begins trial operation

The Shenzhen Mobile Phone Paper, China's first registered mobile newspaper which has been jointly launched by the Shenzhen Press Group and China Mobile Shenzhen, has formally launched its beta test. With the Shenzhen Mobile Phone Paper, users can browse the news offline after they receive the files via Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS). The service is free from now on until March 31. The monthly...

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11 January 2006

Western repression ignored in Internet propaganda against China

The french private organisation calling itself "Reporters Without Borders" once again loses credibility by attacking China while remaining silent on abuses in western countries especially the very neighbour of France, the "United Kingdom" of Britain. In a press release today headlined "Do Internet companies need to be regulated to ensure they respect free expression?" Reporters Without Borders...

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11 January 2006

Murdoch stakes future on internet

NEWS Corp's satellite television arm, DirecTV, could spend up to $US1 billion ($1.335 billion) to enter the wireless high-speed internet market, Rupert Murdoch told analysts on Monday. The 74-year-old left analysts at Citigroup's global media conference in no doubt that he is staking News Corp's future growth on the internet. In the past six months the company has spent $US1.3 billion picking up...

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