2005-2014

15 November 2007

Nepal: Twenty-five journalists arrested during peaceful demonstration

(FNJ/IFEX) - Police interfered and arrested 25 journalists at a demonstration organized by the Federation of Nepali Journalists (FNJ) Kathmandu chapter from the Southern Gate of Singhadurbar, Nepal Government's Secretariat, on 15 November 2007, at 9:30 a.m. (local time). The demonstration was organized to protest against continuous attacks on and intimidation of journalists, demanding action be...

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15 November 2007

Zimbabwe: Chair of media commission retained despite bias against publisher applying for licence

(MISA/IFEX) - The government has controversially retained Dr. Tafataona Mahoso as the chairperson of the restructured state-controlled Media and Information Commission (MIC) which will look into the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe's (ANZ) application to be duly licensed despite court findings on his bias against the publishing company. On 30 October 2007, Dr. Sikhanyiso Ndlovu, the minister of...

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15 November 2007

Zimbabwe: Editor pleads not guilty to charges of practicing journalism without a licence

(MISA/IFEX) - The trial of Bright Chibvuri, the editor of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) magazine, "The Worker", which was scheduled to continue in the southwestern border town of Plumtree on 5 November 2007, was postponed indefinitely due to the ongoing strike by some of the country's magistrates. Magistrates in Harare and Bulawayo embarked on the strike action during the week of 5...

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15 November 2007

In defamation case, Ontario Appeals Court affirms media's right to publish in public interest

(CJFE/IFEX) - (Toronto, November 14, 2007) Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) today hailed the Ontario Court of Appeal's decision affirming the news media's right to publish information in the public's interest as a significant victory for freedom of expression. "The decision will decrease the chilling effect of potential libel suits on reporters and editors," CJFE President Arnold...

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15 November 2007

Egypt: Jailed blogger singled out for mistreatment, lawyers say in complaint

Reporters Without Borders voiced concern today about the state of health of jailed blogger Abdel Kareem Nabil Suleiman and said it supported the complaint which his three lawyers filed yesterday accusing a prison official, identified as Medhat Samir, of conspiring to have him mistreated and held him in solitary confinement. Better known by the blog name of “Kareem Amer,” Suleiman has been held in...

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15 November 2007

Accused killer wins new trial in Dando murder case

Nov. 15 (Bloomberg) -- A man found guilty of murdering British Broadcasting Corp. journalist Jill Dando had his 2001 conviction overturned by a U.K. court. Judges at the Court of Appeal in London ruled that Barry George must be given a new trial after new findings about scientific evidence put the jury verdict in doubt. ``If this evidence had been given to the jury at the trial, there is no...

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15 November 2007

Headache for publishers as men ditch mags for Web

BARCELONA, Nov 15 (Reuters) - Leading European publishers are coming to terms with what teenage boys and men have known for years -- the Web beats magazines in grabbing their eyeballs. Magazine publishers such as London-based media group Emap (EMA.L: Quote, Profile, Research), Germany's Axel Springer (SPRGn.DE: Quote, Profile, Research) and France's Lagardere have seen a split growing in their...

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15 November 2007

USA Today to eliminate 45 newsroom jobs

McLEAN, Va. — USA Today, the highest circulation newspaper in the country and the flagship of industry leader Gannett Co., announced plans today to eliminate about 45 newsroom jobs. The job losses reflect a cut of almost 9 percent to a current newsroom staff of about 500, USA Today spokeswoman Alexandra Nicholson said. They will be scattered throughout news, money, sports and lifestyle sections...

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14 November 2007

Algeria: Reporter spends night in police cell after referring to police corruption

Reporters Without Borders condemns the arrest of Noureddine Boukraa, the national daily Ennahar’s bureau chief in the city of Annaba (600 km east of Algiers), who was detained on 12 November in connection with an article about alleged corruption within the local security services and was held over night. “Algeria’s journalists are not able to work freely, despite the deceptive calm they seem to...

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14 November 2007

Rwanda: Journalist walks free after years in prison

Kigali - A Rwandan journalist has been acquitted of genocide charges by a traditional court after serving 11 years in prison, a human rights group said on Tuesday. "The journalist is currently at home after being acquitted last week in a session of gacacas (traditional courts) of Ruhango in the central part of the country," said Venant Nshimyumurwa, a member of the League for the Defence of Human...

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