2005-2014

1 December 2009

Tunisia jails two critical journalists and harasses others

Harassment of critical journalists has been escalating in Tunisia since President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali threatened to prosecute anyone who casts doubt on his reelection for a fifth five-year term in office on October 25. Journalists Zuhair Makhlouf and Taoufik Ben Brik were both sentenced to jail terms in the past week, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. Ben...

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1 December 2009

Pakistan editor receives WAN-IFRA Golden Pen of Freedom

Najam Sethi, the former Editor-in-Chief of the Daily Times in Pakistan, has been awarded the 2009 Golden Pen of Freedom, the annual press freedom prize of the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA). In accepting the Golden Pen, Sethi said the award "reflects the fierce commitment and courage of South Asia’s free media to the perennial quest for reporting the truth and...

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1 December 2009

Syria: Newspaper journalist is latest victim of wave of arbitrary arrests and trials

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has expressed concern over Ma’an Aqil, a journalist who was arrested at his office in the Syrian government daily Al-Thawra in Damascus on November 22 by police from the national criminal investigations department, who took him to their headquarters for questioning. The police have not explained why he has been arrested. Two days after his arrest, the Union of Press...

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30 November 2009

Chadian authorities continue to hound new weekly, seek its closure

The Chadian government has been harassing the new, privately-owned weekly La Voix. On November 28, one of its reporters was verbally abused by the interior minister and then detained for several hours while, on December 3, a court is due to rule on a government complaint challenging its legality, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. While covering the installation of a new police director...

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27 November 2009

Refusal to renew editor-in-chief’s contract threatens German broadcasting independence

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has deplored the reported intention of the majority of the board of the German public television network ZDF – who are led by members of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrat Union – to reject the director-general’s request to renew editor-in-chief Nikolaus Brender’s contract for another five years. The press freedom organisation believes the opposition to...

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27 November 2009

President dominates Equatorial Guinea state media election coverage, opposition invisible

The November 29 presidential election in Equatorial Guinea, in the absence of any independent media, has been witnessing one-sided coverage by the state-owned media, according to Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF). After winning the 2002 election with 97.1 per cent of the votes, President Teodoro Obiang Nguema has “promised” to win this one with more than 97 per cent again. “It is no surprise that...

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27 November 2009

Editor released in Tamil Nadu after a month in prison

AS Mani, the editor of the Tamil magazine Naveena Netrikkan, was freed on bail Saturday after being held for a month in Tamil Nadu. Relatives told Paris-based Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) that he returned home at midday. He still faces defemation charges.

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26 November 2009

Mexico: Radio station director murdered in Jalisco state

The body of José Galindo Robles, the head of Radio Universidad de Guadalajara, was discovered at his home in Guadalajara, in the western state of Jalisco, on November 24, after it was noticed that several days had gone by with no word from him, Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. His body was found wrapped in a blanket and with the hands tied with cable. The prosecutor’s office said the...

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25 November 2009

Maguindanao death toll worst for press in recent history

A brutal election-related massacre in the Philippine province of Maguindanao on Monday appears to be single deadliest event for the press since 1992, when the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) began keeping detailed records on journalist deaths. The New York Times and the Associated Press (AP) reported Wednesday that at least 18 of the victims have been preliminarily identified...

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25 November 2009

Two foreign journalists released in Somalia after 15 months as hostages

Canadian freelance reporter Amanda Lindhout and Australian freelance photographer Nigel Brennan were released Wednesday in Mogadishu. Lindhout and Brennan were released at 20:40 hrs local time, according to Ahmed Diriye, MP, who spoke to the National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ). The two journalists were taken to a heavily guarded Hotel Sahafi in central Mogadishu. They are due to be flown...

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