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13 December 2010

Sri Lanka: Reporters covering attack on opposition politician assaulted

Lanka E News journalist Shantha Wijesuriya and Sirasa TV airport correspondent Premalal were attacked on December 7 by a group of persons purported to be Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) employees. Wijesuriya suffered serious injuries and had to seek treatment at a hospital, according to press freedom group Free Media Movement (FMM). According to reports, the journalists were assaulted by...

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13 December 2010
Former women's magazine editor in Turkey arrested, faces 21 years in prison

Former women's magazine editor in Turkey arrested, faces 21 years in prison

Berivan Eker, former editor-in-chief of the Renge Heviya Jine women's magazine, was arrested on December 5, IPS Communication Foundation (BIANET) has reported. Her predecessors, Gurbet Cakar, Sultan Sonsuz, Ruken Aktas and Sibel Esmer are all either convicted or facing prison terms. Renge Heviya Jine (The Colour of Women's Hope) is the only women's magazine in Turkey published in both Kurdish and...

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13 December 2010

El Salvador's new public information law welcomed

ARTICLE 19 has welcomed the approval of the Access to Public Information Law by El Salvador's Legislative Assembly on December 2, and urged President Mauricio Funes to immediately sign and implement the legislation. The law marks a new era for freedom of information in the country. "The adoption of the Access to Public Information Law by the Legislative Assembly is an important step forward in the...

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13 December 2010

Sentence against journalist annulled in Venezuela

The State of Carabobo's Court of Appeals (in north-central Venezuela) has annulled the ruling that sentenced journalist Francisco "Pancho" Pérez to three years and nine months in prison, disqualified him professionally and politically for the same period of time, and ordered him to pay 1,250 Tax Units (approx. US$18,900). Pérez began practicing journalism again for the newspaper El Carabobeño on...

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13 December 2010

Zambia information minister must refrain from statutory regulation, says IPI

The International Press Institute (IPI) has released its report on the state of media freedom and media regulation in Zambia. Recently, authorities in the southern African country have called for the media to be regulated by statute, despite the fact that a voluntary regulatory body was established earlier this year. The Zambia Media Council (ZAMEC), as it is known, has not yet been launched...

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13 December 2010
Reuters: Thailand says troops may have killed journalist

Reuters: Thailand says troops may have killed journalist

Investigators in Thailand now believe that troops may have been responsible for the shooting death of Reuters cameraman Hiro Muramoto, on April 10, according to a leaked preliminary state probe by Thailand's Department of Special Investigation (DSI), Reuters reported from Bangkok last week. Thai government investigators said in the report that the death of Muramoto, a 43-year-old Japanese national...

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13 December 2010
Russian court overturns Beketov defamation conviction

Russian court overturns Beketov defamation conviction

The Khimki City Court has overturned the defamation conviction of editor Mikhail Beketov, a verdict that had been condemned in Russia and abroad, New York-based press freedom group Committee to Protect Journalists has reported. Beketov had been found guilty last month of slandering Khimki Mayor Vladimir Strelchenko in a 2007 television interview. In the interview, the journalist said his car had...

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13 December 2010
Belarus media harassed in run-up to presidential vote

Belarus media harassed in run-up to presidential vote

Belarusian authorities must stop harassing independent media outlets and journalists and allow them to cover the December 19 presidential elections without fear of reprisal, New York-based press freedom group Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has demanded. On Wednesday, the Minsk-based pro-opposition news website Charter 97 reported that authorities had opened their third criminal case this...

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13 December 2010
After running leaked cables, websites face harassment in Middle East

After running leaked cables, websites face harassment in Middle East

The Lebanese news website Al-Akhbar is being harassed after it published US diplomatic cables that were first disclosed by WikiLeaks. The website was hacked last week by unknown attackers, while the Tunisian government blocked domestic access to the site. Saudi officials blocked access to the independent website Elaph, which also published some of the cables. "We condemn efforts to restrict news...

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13 December 2010
Journalists targeted in post-election riots in Haiti

Journalists targeted in post-election riots in Haiti

Paris-based press freedom group Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) is worried about the dangers for Haitian and foreign journalists from the rioting that has shaken the country since the widely disputed results of the general elections were announced on December 7. Although the media have so far been largely spared, RSF urge the supporters of the various parties and alliances to refrain from turning...

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