2005-2014

23 May 2008

Inter-American court urges government to void journalist's 1999 libel conviction, reform defamation laws

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has hailed a new ruling from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights that urges Argentina to void a criminal defamation sentence against a local journalist and reform its defamation laws. The decision by the international court, based in San José, Costa Rica's capital, was made public on Tuesday by the Argentine human rights organisation Centro de...

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23 May 2008

Three sentenced in Congolese journalist’s murder

Three men accused of killing Congolese journalist Serge Maheshe in 2007 were convicted and sentenced to death, while two others were acquitted in a retrial that ended Wednesday. The trial failed to establish a clear motive for the crime, according to news reports and local journalists. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) expressed concern that key aspects of the case remain...

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23 May 2008

Two Iraqi journalists killed in separate incidents

Two Iraqi journalists were killed in separate incidents this week. Wisam Ali Ouda, a cameraman for the Afaq television station, was shot as he walked home in the Obaidi district of Baghdad on Wednesday morning, Reuters reported. The station’s public relations head Bushra Abdul-Amir told Reuters that witnesses said Ouda was shot by an “American sniper.” Station secretary Ghufran al-Bakri told the...

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23 May 2008

Iraqi TV station says US troops killed cameraman

An Iraqi television station accused US troops Thursday of shooting dead one of its cameramen as he walked to his Baghdad home. The body of a second journalist, Haidar Hashim al-Husseini, a reporter for Al-Sharq newspaper, was found dumped in a field with nine other corpses in Diyala province, police and colleagues said. A spokeswoman for the Afaq television channel, according to a Reuters report...

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22 May 2008

Two Bhutani journalists threatened with death by political activists for covering student demonstration

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has condemned the death threats made in a refugee camp in eastern Nepal on May 16 by members of the Communist Party of Bhutan Marxist-Leninist Maoist (CPB-MLM) against journalists working for the Bhutan News Service, www.apfanews.com, a website operated by the Association of Press Freedom Activists (APFA), a Bhutani exile organisation. The incident took place during...

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22 May 2008

Newspaper editor in Zimbabwe convicted of practicing journalism without accreditation

Bright Chibvuri, the editor of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Union's bi-weekly newspaper The Worker, has been convicted of contravening section 83(1) of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which criminalises practicing journalism without accreditation. Chibvuri is appealing to the High Court against both the conviction and the sentence. On 29 April, Chibvuri, who...

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22 May 2008

Dominican Republic: Journalist's car fired upon amid post-electoral tensions

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) expressed concern over the safety of television host Juan Bonilla Martínez, of the privately-owned station Mega Visión 43, whose car was fired upon in front of the television station in the northern Dominican Republic city of Santiago de los Caballeros on May 21. RSF has called on the government to protect journalists better. The attack came five days after...

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22 May 2008

Chinese weekly suspended, its editorial staff fired over earthquake coverage

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has expressed concern over the decision ot Chinese authorities to suspend publication of a magazine and forced the dismissal of its editorial staff over coverage of last week's earthquake in Sichuan province. New Travel Weekly, published in Chongqing, was reportedly suspended from publishing on May 20 after failing to carry mourning messages in the...

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22 May 2008

RSF calls for "balance in matters of news and information" in support of Taiwanese journalists

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) is exasperated by the UN's inability to resolve the problem of Taiwanese journalists who want to cover the annual World Health Assembly in Geneva. Their requests for accreditation were refused again this year on the sole grounds that they are Taiwanese. "It is incredible that the same week that Ma Ying-Jeou was sworn in as Taiwan's new president, the United Nations...

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22 May 2008

Philippines: Delay in trial of accused masterminds in journalist’s killing

The Committee to Protect Journalists has expressed concern at delays in the trial of two government officials accused of ordering the 2005 murder of columnist Marlene Garcia-Esperat. The trial has been brought to an indefinite halt because of questions surrounding jurisdiction. The Cebu Court of Appeals issued an injunction last week that bars the Cebu City Regional Trial Court from proceeding...

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