2005-2014

25 August 2007

Jaffna's media in grip of terror, newspaper staff fleeing in face of death threats

Since fighting resumed in 2006 between the Sri Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the Tamil-populated Jaffna peninsula has become a nightmare for journalists, human rights activists and the civilian population in general. Murders, kidnappings, threats and censorship have made Jaffna one of the world’s most dangerous places for journalists to work in. Seven media...

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25 August 2007

Burmese junta tightens telecom screws to control news of protests

The Burmese military dictatorship may be tightening the already restricted telecommunication channels in the country to prevent information about the ongoing mass protests and arrests in Rangoon from leaking out. Members of the Burmese National League for Democracy shout slogans during a protest in front of the Burmese embassy in Seoul August 8, 2007. The protest was held in conjunction with the...

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25 August 2007

Moroccan journalist in court for disparaging king

CASABLANCA (Reuters) - A Moroccan journalist who could be jailed for up to five years for showing disrespect for King Mohammed began his trial on Friday saying he had done no wrong. Current affairs magazine editor Ahmed Reda Benchemsi questioned the usefulness of elections next month in a country where the monarchy wields ultimate power. Only a few days earlier, the king used his annual address to...

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25 August 2007

Hamas men beat up journalists covering Fatah protest in Gaza

Members of the Hamas Security Force beat up journalists covering a demonstration Friday held by the rival Fatah movement, briefly arresting four of them and confiscating their cameras in a sign of growing intolerance for political opposition, Arabnews.com has reported. The Hamas men fired guns over the heads of the protesters and scuffled with Fatah members, who threw stones and bottles at a...

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25 August 2007

Filipino journalist hounded out of paper for 'insulting' maids

MANILA, Philippines -- A lifestyle writer has been hounded out of her job by death threats and hate mail after she wrote a travel piece many readers found insulting to millions of Filipinos who work abroad. Malu Fernandez told Agence France-Presse she quit her job as a columnist at the Manila Standard Today newspaper and People Asia magazine after her article "From Boracay to Greece!" provoked...

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25 August 2007

Defamation case against Hindu: Delhi court order quashed

NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court has quashed a complaint and a summoning order passed thereon by a court here against The Hindu, its editor and the publisher to face trial in a defamation case following a complaint over publication o f a report relating to a matrimonial dispute in 1994, holding that “material averments attracting the defamation charge under Section 499 (defamation) of the Indian...

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25 August 2007

Azerbaijani Supreme Court upholds editor's prison sentence over defamation

The Supreme Court of Azerbaijan has upheld journalist Eynulla Fatullayev’s 30-month prison sentence on charges of defaming Azerbaijanis in an article. Fatullayev, editor of the now-shuttered Russian-language weekly Realny Azerbaijan and the Azeri-language daily Gündalik Azarbaycan, has been held in the Ministry of National Security isolation ward since his April 20 conviction by the Yasamal

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25 August 2007

Wave of violence in Somalia claims seventh victim in 2007

A Somali radio journalist was gunned down Friday — the seventh journalist to be killed in a crisis where reporters have become prime targets in spreading violence. Somali police display an arms cache in Mogadishu, 20 August 2007. Eight people were killed in overnight clashes here between rebels and Somali government forces, police said Friday, as a Somali radio journalist was shot dead in the...

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25 August 2007

Egyptian blogger, Burmese reporter win Knight International Journalism Award

Egyptian blogger Wael Abbas and Burmese investigative reporter May Thingyan Hein have been named the 2007 Knight International Journalism Award winners by the International Centre for Journalists (ICFJ). They will be honoured along with Founders Award recipient Tom Brokaw at the 10th annual ICFJ Awards Dinner at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Centre in Washington DC on November...

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24 August 2007

Criminal charges against Sierra Leone newspaper editor dropped

(MFWA/IFEX) - On 21 August 2007, Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Fred Carew, discontinued criminal proceedings against Philip Neville, editor of the "Standard Times", a privately-owned Freetown-based daily newspaper. A MFWA correspondent reported that President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah ordered the trial to be discontinued after the newspaper had fulfilled a number of conditions laid down by...

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