2005-2014

5 August 2009

World's oldest Sunday newspaper 'Observer' on brink of closure in a Guardian cost-cutting drive

The Guardian Media Group is reported to be considering options for the future of its Sunday newspaper, the Observer, as part of a strategic company review. The company – parent of Guardian News & Media, which publishes the Observer, Guardian and guardian.co.uk – is said not to have ruled out closing the Sunday title. Some details from the Guardian itself: [ Link] GMG has reportedly floated the...

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5 August 2009

Newspaper run entirely by 'low-caste', rural women in Uttar Pradesh wins UNESCO literacy award

It was a project doomed to failure: a newspaper written, produced and sold by poor, “low-caste,” rural and barely literate women – in a local language. Now, it has won international recognition through the award of the 2009 UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize. Khabar Lahariya (the name means “News Waves”) was launched in May 2002 and today the 8-page fortnightly newspaper, published in local...

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5 August 2009
Politkovskaya murder retrial begins in Moscow, critics question quthorities' will to solve case

Politkovskaya murder retrial begins in Moscow, critics question quthorities' will to solve case

Three suspects in the murder of journalist and Kremlin critic Anna Politkovskaya went on trial for a second time in Moscow Wednesday, according to news reports. No one has been sentenced for the October 2006 killing of Politkovskaya, who published scathing exposes of official corruption and rights abuses. The three alleged accomplices, the only people so far charged in connection with the murder...

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5 August 2009

Finnish journalist faces jail time in Slovenia over broadcast accusing government of corruption

Slovenia has charged Finnish journalist Magnus Berglund with two counts of criminal defamation after a documentary he produced quoted unnamed sources as saying that members of the former Slovene government – including former Prime Minister Janez Jansa – accepted bribes in arms deals with Finnish arms maker Patria. Berglund made the allegations in a September 2008 documentary produced by Finland’s...

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5 August 2009

Police beat women opposing trial of Sudanese journalist who wore trousers, hearing adjourned

The trial of Sudanese journalist Lubna Hussein, who faces 40 lashes after being arrested a month ago for wearing trousers, has been postponed, again, until September 7, according to International Press Institute (IPI) fellow Vuslat Dogan Sabancı, who was in Khartoum for the hearing. The delay in Hussein’s trial is apparently designed to give the judges time to decide whether Hussein’s job as a UN...

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5 August 2009

Two Moroccan magazines banned for opinion poll on king despite 91% favourable results

Moroccan authorities banned two magazines from newsstands over the weekend after they published a poll about the 10-year reign of King Mohammed VI. Official MAP news agency said independent weeklies, Tel Quel, a French-language publication, and Nichane, an Arabic-language magazine, were seized for failing to respect the 1958 press code. Communications Minister Khalid Naciri told the Associated...

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5 August 2009
Sunni extremist confesses to murder and rape of Al-Arabiya journalist Atwar Bahjat

Sunni extremist confesses to murder and rape of Al-Arabiya journalist Atwar Bahjat

A member of extremist Sunni group Jaish Mohammed group has confessed to the 2006 rape and murder of prominent Iraqi TV reporter Atwar Bahjat. The confession was made in a videotape broadcast at a press conference Tuesday. Suspect Yasser al-Takhi described how he and three others abducted and killed Bahjat and her two-man crew, Adnan Abdullah and Khaled Mohsen, in the central Iraqi town of Samarra...

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5 August 2009

Zimbabwe lifts ban on newspaper group, allows it to resume operations after six years

Zimbabwean authorities have issued an operating licence to a local newspaper group forced to close down by the state five years ago, a move which suggests the new unity government intends to open up the media. A special committee set up by the Information Ministry nearly two years ago said the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ) was free to resume operations, according to zimguardian.com. ANZ...

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5 August 2009

34 radio stations pulled off the air in Venezuela, another 200 threatened with closure

The Venezuelan government has withdrawn the licences of 34 radio and TV stations, 13 of which already stopped broadcasting earlier. When the authorities announced the withdrawal of 34 broadcast media licences on August 2, they warned that 200 other radio and TV stations could suffer the same fate. Diosdado Cabello, the minister who supervises the National Telecommunications Commission (Conatel)...

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5 August 2009

Eight newspaper publishers questioned for implicating Niger president’s son in corruption

Eight newspaper publishers were interrogated by the Niamey police on August 1 at the behest of the President’s son for publishing a document accusing him and another person of taking kickbacks, Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. After being questioned, two of the publishers were taken into custody in connection with another case and were due to appear before prosecutors on August 5....

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