2005-2014

21 March 2004

Ifra helps Indian newspapers standardize printing profiles

A group of eight Indian newspapers are participating in an 18-month project aimed at creating common printing standards among them. Ifra, the worldwide publishers’ association, is conducting the project. The goal is to help the newspapers in India improve their color quality while harmonizing their printing profiles, which are what the page designers use to tell the printers what to print. The...

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13 March 2004

Express campaign to motivate youngsters to cast their votes

The Indian Express group has initiated the ‘Black Ink on your Nail’ campaign to motivate and mobilise today’s youth to cast their vote. This two month long mammoth campaign will run across nine cities in India. The campaign is aimed at educating youngsters about their right to choose their representative and the processes involved during elections. It will attempt to engage them in a discussion...

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10 March 2004

Vaarttha launches three new editions; touches 19

On the occasion of Women's Day, that is, March 8, Vaarttha, the No 2 daily in Andhra Pradesh, launched three new editions from Guntur, Srikakulam and Tadepalliguddam - located along the coast of the Bay of Bengal - taking its total tally to 19 editions. The objective, as chief executive officer of Vaarttha, KRK Prasad states, is to increase its spread in the region and cater to every district...

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8 March 2004

Directory to compile development journalists in Indian region

Contact info for all the journalists who cover development in Karnataka, a state in India, will soon be available in a handy reference. The bilingual directory is intended to help the journalists and development organizations in the region work together more closely. Communication for Development and Learning (CDL), based in the city of Bangalore, is compiling the directory. CDL is devoted to...

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4 March 2004

José Couso: Dying for the Truth in Baghdad

The invasion and occupation of Iraq has certainly had its share of crimes and atrocities, any of which should be cause enough to have Bush and Blair brought before the Hague, if the mechanisms of international justice could actually bring the powerful to heel, beginning with the war itself, which, as noted here at Counterpunch and elsewhere, was a crime against peace, the worst possible crime, as...

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1 March 2004

Brits vs. Yanks

Objectivity, the guiding principle of the U.S. media, stands accused of undermining the press’s ability to challenge the Bush administration as it rushed to war in Iraq. We were too worried about balance, the argument goes, so concerned with giving all sides a say that we neglected our adversarial role. The British press, meanwhile, which is much more comfortable expressing its political leanings...

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1 March 2004

Bad Circulation

During the past few years, newspapers and magazines have devoted millions of column inches to the shenanigans and suspect accounting of various corporate malefactors. But comparatively little attention has been paid to allegations of financial impropriety leveled at one segment of the business world: media companies. The press has had little to say about the question whether some newspapers and...

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10 February 2004

Tamil Nadu police arrest Nakkheeran reporter

Reporters Without Borders (Reporters sans frontières) protested today against the arrest of a reporter working for the Tamil-language biweekly Nakkheeran, in what is a renewed attempt by the authorities in the south-eastern state of Tamil Nadu to implicate the staff of this independent newspaper in a murder allegedly committed by the well-known local bandit Veerappan. The reporter, who is known...

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9 February 2004

Local Indian journalists polish feature writing skills

A World War II cemetery in India became a subject to test journalists’ writing skills during a five-day workshop in the northern state of Nagaland, one of the country’s most remote areas. The course on balanced reporting, conducted in January by the Thomson Foundation, was designed for local journalists in Kohima, Nagaland’s capital. Thomson said that 12 of the workshop participants were from...

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4 February 2004

Tehelka launches The People's Paper

Tehelka - which shot into instant fame with its headline-gabbing sting operation aimed at exposing corruption at high places and the vitriolic political reaction that followed the exercise - is back in the reckoning with a newspaper. The weekly, espousing ‘public interest journalism at its core', was launched on January 30, 2004. Offering an invitation price of Rs 10, Tehelka - The People's Paper...

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