2005-2014

17 September 2008

Bolivia: More journalists and media outlets targeted in internal conflict

In a week of violent confrontations between supporters and opponents of Bolivian President Evo Morales's government in the departments of Santa Cruz, Cobija, Tarija and, to a lesser degree, in the city of La Paz, several media outlets and journalists have been the target of threats and attacks, according to Instituto Prensa y Sociedad (IPYS). On September 9, approximately 200 youths who oppose the...

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17 September 2008

UN urged to stop discriminating against Taiwanese journalists

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has deplored the UN's refusal to issue accreditation to the Taiwanese media for the 63rd session of General Assembly that opened in New York on September 16. The press freedom organisation recently wrote to Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon asking him to help find a way for Taiwan's journalists to be able to cover the General Assembly. The United Nations has been...

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16 September 2008

Iraq: Four from al-Sharqiya TV killed in Mosul; arrests made

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has welcomed the arrest of suspects in the killing of three journalists and a media worker in Mosul. CNN reported that two suspects have been arrested in Mosul, according to Gen Jalal Tawfeeq, military operations commander of Nineveh province, who spoke to al-Sharqiya. According to Reuters, Brig-Gen Khalid Abdul Sattar, the spokesman for Iraqi military...

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16 September 2008

IFJ welcomes decision to revoke prize awarded to journalist known for attacking Roma minority

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has welcomed the decision by the 2008 Academy of the Chernoritzets Hrabar award in Sofia, on the recommendation of the Union of Bulgarian Publishers, to revoke a prize awarded earlier this year to a racist journalist. The prestigious Young Journalist of the Year prize given to Kalin Rumenov, a journalist with the Novinar national newspaper...

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16 September 2008

High-ranking Saudi official issues fatwa against journalists for spreading "depravity"

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has voiced its deep concern about an upsurge in fatwas (religious decrees) calling for the murder of journalists in the Arab and Muslim world. In the latest case, a high-ranking Saudi official, Sheikh Saleh al-Luhidan, president of the superior council of jurisprudence, issued a fatwa on September 12 calling for the murder of owners of Arabic satellite television...

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15 September 2008

Acquittal of Venezuelan drug baron in journalist's murder is "a victory for impunity"

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has called for a review of the trial of alleged regional drug baron Ceferino García, who was acquitted by a court in Maturín, in the northeastern Venezuelan state of Monagas, on August 28 of masterminding the murder of Mauro Marcano. A radio and newspaper journalist, Marcano was gunned down outside his Maturín home on September 1, 2004. "This verdict is a victory...

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15 September 2008

Pakistan: Four journalists temporarily abducted, assaulted during armed attack on press club

A group of 50 armed men Sunday attacked the Shahpur Jehanian Press Club, of Tehsil Daulatpur, in Nawabshah District of Pakistan's southern province of Sindh, the Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) has reported. The attackers beat and abducted four journalists and took physical control of the press club. Among those assaulted were: Manthar Dahiri, correspondent of the daily newspaper Sobh and...

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12 September 2008

Dakar newspaper editor gets three years in prison for libelling president

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has urged President Abdoulaye Wade to quickly embark on a thorough overhaul of Senegal's press legislation after El Malick Seck, the editor of the Dakar-based daily 24 Heures Chrono, was sentenced to three years in prison on September 12 for an article claiming that the president was involved in money laundering. "This sentence reflects all the unfairness and...

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12 September 2008

Former journalist and mullah sentenced to 20 years in prison for publishing translation of Koran

Press freedom organisations have urged Afghan President Hamid Karzai to intercede on behalf of former journalist Ahmed Ghous Zalmai and Mullah Qari Mushtaq, who were sentenced Thursday by a Kabul court to 20 years in prison for publishing a Dari translation of the Koran. Dari is the Farsi (Persian) dialect spoken in Afghanistan. "We appeal to the president's spirit of tolerance and ask him to...

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12 September 2008

Singapore attorney-general sues Wall Street Journal Asia

Singapore's attorney-general's office has initiated legal action against the Wall Street Journal Asia and two editors over articles allegedly casting doubt on the judiciary's integrity, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP). A statement on the website of the Attorney-General's Chambers on Friday said the articles "impugn on the impartiality, integrity and independence of the Singapore judiciary...

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