2005-2014

2 February 2010

Belarus: Government extends its control over all media

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko on Monday signed a decree establishing extensive control over Internet access and online content. The decree is due to take effect on July 1. Decree No 6 concerning “national Internet network improvement measures” requires that all online access devices such as computers and mobile phones be identified and registered with Internet service providers. This will...

More
2 February 2010

Former PM sues Finnish journalist for 1.5 million euros before Slovenian court

Former Prime Minister Janez Jansa and the Slovenian state have brought defamation charges against Finnish journalist Magnus Berglund in connection the bribery allegations he made during a programme broadcast on Finnish TV station YLE on September 1, 2008. Berglund accused Jansa, other senior officials and high ranking military officers of collecting around 20 million euros in illegal commissions...

More
1 February 2010

Ethiopia jails editor whose paper challenged Zenawi

An Ethiopian judge sentenced a journalist to prison on Friday in connection with a January 2008 column that criticised Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s statements about religious affairs in Ethiopia, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported quoting local journalists. Federal High Court Judge Mohammed Omar sentenced Editor Ezedin Mohamed of the Muslim-oriented newspaper Al-Quds to one...

More
1 February 2010

In Tunisia, critical journalist’s appeal rejected

A Tunisian appeals court on Saturday upheld a six-month prison sentence against journalist Taoufik Ben Brik, one of President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali’s toughest critics, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. Ben Brik was charged in November 2009 with assault, property damage, and violating public morality in connection with a purported attack on a woman, according to CPJ...

More
1 February 2010

Burmese government jails another DVB journalist

Over the past month, military-controlled courts in Burma have sentenced two undercover Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) reporters to punitive prison terms over their reporting, according to Committee to Protect Journalists. On January 27, a special court attached to Rangoon’s notorious Insein prison sentenced DVB reporter Ngwe Soe Lin, also known as Tun Kyaw, to 13 years in prison on charges...

More
1 February 2010

Officials in Tajikistan bring libel actions against print media in run-up to elections

An appeal court in Tajikistan has upheld an astronomical damages award against a news weekly and the announcement of new lawsuits against a total of four leading newspapers, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). The damages award of 300,000 somoni (49,000 euros) against the weekly Paykon (“Arrowhead”) was confirmed on January 26 by a Dushanbe court. The newspaper had been ordered to pay...

More
1 February 2010

Mexican publisher shot to death in Guerrero

Jorge Ochoa Martínez, a Mexican editor and publisher in Guerrero state, died late Friday after being shot in the face, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has said quoting local press reports. Ochoa was killed in the town of Ayutla de los Libres after leaving a birthday party for a local politician, a friend and a coworker told New York-based CPJ. A spokesperson for Guerrero’s governor told...

More
1 February 2010

Dissident journalist arrested in Cuba as freedom to inform is stalled

Cuba’s National Revolutionary Police (PNR) arrested Juan Carlos Reyes Ocaña, journalist on the small news agency Holguín Press on January 29 then took him to a police barracks to face charges of “insult”, “disobedience” and “illegal economic activity”. He was released the following day, but has started a hunger strike as he awaits his trial which could mean a prison sentence, Reporters sans...

More
29 January 2010

Philippines: Journalist’s killer sentenced to life imprisonment

A life sentence has been passed on hitman Madix Maulana for the 2005 murder of radio journalist Edgar Amoro in Pagadian, on the southern island of Mindanao. Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) regards it as an “encouraging sign” but believes the case should not be closed until the masterminds and accomplices have been identified and brought to trial. In a written message to RSF after sentencing, Amoro...

More
29 January 2010

Morocco’s most critical publication faces closure

Liquidators took control of Morocco's most critical publication this week after a Casablanca commercial appeals court declared on Monday that Le Journal Hebdomadaire’s former publishing group, Media Trust, and its current one, Trimedia, were bankrupt, lawyers told the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). Aboubakr Jamaï, co-founder and former managing director of Le Journal Hebdomadaire, told...

More