2005-2014

15 January 2010

RSF to create centre of operations for Haitian journalists

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) is setting up a centre of operations for Haitian journalists in Port-au-Prince in order to enable them to cover the earthquake situation and thereby assist the process of providing assistance to the population. Due to be operational by the start of next week, the centre will be equipped with laptops, mobile phones and generators provided by the leading Canadian...

More
15 January 2010

Harassment of independent Uzbek journalists heats up

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Friday called on Uzbek authorities to immediately cease their campaign of intimidation against the handful of independent journalists remaining in the Central Asian country. From January 7-9, at least six journalists were called in for “an informal talk” at the Tashkent prosecutor’s office, and at least four of them were interrogated about their work...

More
15 January 2010

Cameroon: Editor released from prison after paying fine

Jean-Bosco Talla, the editor of the privately-owned weekly Germinal, was released from Yaoundé’s Kondengui prison on January 13 after paying the fine imposed by a court on December 28 on a charge of insulting the president, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. Talla, who described himself as “calm,” told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that Germinal would continue to be published “without any...

More
14 January 2010

Dominican Republic: Businessman accused of paying two men to murder cameraman

Jaime Flete García, a businessman based in the northern city of Santiago de los Caballeros, was charged on January 12 with hiring two men to murder Normando García, a cameraman employed by Santiago-based TV station Teleunión, on August 9, 2008. The two alleged hit men, José Amauris Santiago and José Agustín Espinal, were also charged with his murder. “In a country where impunity has often been the...

More
14 January 2010

Journalist assaulted for his work in Namibia

Freelance journalist John Grobler was assaulted by four men at a bar Friday evening in Namibian capital Windhoek, cutting his face with a broken glass and kicking him repeatedly in the head. Grobler was taken to MediCity Emergency Clinic, where he was treated and released, the journalist told the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). Grobler was able to identify three out of four...

More
14 January 2010

Newspaper editor jailed for defamation in Peru

The editor of a Peruvian weekly newspaper in the Amazonian city of Bagua, Utcubamba province, was sentenced on Tuesday to one year in jail on defamation charges, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported quoting local news reports. Alejandro Carrascal Carrasco, editor of the Bagua-based weekly Nor Oriente, was convicted of charges that stemmed from a series of articles he wrote in...

More
14 January 2010

Imminent deportation of US journalist working in West Bank

Press freedom groups have condemned the detention and imminent expulsion of US journalist Jared Malsin, who has worked for the past two years as an editor with Ma’an, an independent Palestinian news agency based in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. Malsin, 26, was arrested and placed in a detention centre on arriving at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion airport on the afternoon of January 12 on a flight from...

More
14 January 2010

Draft amendments to Kuwait press law threaten press freedom

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) on Thursday urged the Kuwaiti prime minister and parliament not to back amendments to the publications law that it said would pose a threat to freedom of the press. Parliament is due to vote in the next few days, according to the website Alqabas.com, on amendments proposed by the information minister, Sheikh Ahmad Abdallah al-Sabah. “The adoption of these amendments...

More
14 January 2010

Mauritania: Website editor still held three weeks after completing prison sentence

Hanevy Ould Dehah, the editor of the website Taqadoumy, continues to be detained illegally in Nouakchott’s Dar Naim prison although he should have been freed on December 24 on completing a six-month sentence on a charge of “offending public decency.” The good news is that, under pressure from his family, he has abandoned the hunger strike that was threatening his health, Reporters sans Frontières...

More
13 January 2010

Pakistan: Reporter probably held by army after being kidnapped by Taliban

Pakistani authorities have been urged to explain what has happened to Mohammad Rasheed, a freelance reporter who is probably being held by the army. It is believed he was arrested after being held for several days by a Taliban group in North Waziristan. “I don’t know where he is; his entire family is very worried,” his wife told Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). “The authorities must quickly say...

More