2005-2014

9 August 2007

Mexican army detains four reporters covering a drug raid

New York, August 9, 2007—The Committee to Protect Journalists today expressed deep skepticism about drug and weapons charges leveled against four reporters in northern Mexico covering a drug raid. The reporters were detained Tuesday by the Mexican army while they were covering a routine drug raid in the northern state of Coahuila. They have been charged with possession of a firearm and marijuana...

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9 August 2007

Iraqi journalist detained, beaten, expelled from Syria

(HRinfo/IFEX) - On 9 August 2007, HRinfo called for the Syrian government to conduct a fair and honest investigation concerning the assault against Iraqi journalist Saif al-Khayat, who suffered serious violations at the hands of Syrian Political Security Forces before he was ordered to leave Syria in mid-June 2007. Al-Khayat had traveled to Syria to work as a member of the Japanese news agency...

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9 August 2007

Two Sierra Leone presenters injured in attack on evangelical radio station

Reporters Without Borders today condemned an attack by gunmen on Believers Broadcasting Network (BBN), a protestant-run radio station in Freetown, in the early hours of 4 August in which two radio presenters were shot and seriously injured. “Coming just a few days before general elections on 11 August, this armed attack should be taken seriously,” the press freedom organisation said. “We urge the...

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9 August 2007

South Korea does a North, issues stringent guidelines for journalists

The Roh Moo-hyun administration has decided to take disciplinary measures against South Korean journalists and their companies that do not abide by the "news embargoes'' set by government offices. The Government Information Agency (GIA) Tuesday unveiled a plan to implement it as early as next month, the Korea Times reported. Journalists who violate embargoes would be banned from interviewing...

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9 August 2007

All communications can be intercepted under new Zimbabwe law signed by Robert Mugabe

A "spying" bill that would allow the Zimbabwean government to intercept mail, phone calls and emails without having to get court approval has been signed into law by President Robert Mugabe. Under the "Interception of Communications" law, service providers will be forced to install "enabling equipment" on behalf of the government, which would allow senior intelligence, police and revenue officials...

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9 August 2007

Russian actions erode press freedom, echo Soviet era: WAN

The World Association of Newspapers (WAN) and the World Editors Forum (WEF) have protested to Russian President Vladimir Putin against the incarceration of a journalist in a psychiatric hospital for writing an article critical of psychiatric services — a punishment that echoes human rights abuses from the Soviet era. A psychiatric clinic in the north-western city of Murmansk has confirmed it has

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8 August 2007

Kazakhstan: Another journalist killed in road accident - seventh since 2002

Reporters Without Borders today urged the Kazakh authorities not to come to any hasty conclusions about Saken Tauzhanov’s death on 2 August and to do everything possible to clarify the circumstances. The authorities said the 37-year-old journalist, who wrote for three independent news websites, zonakz.net, dialog.kz, and kub.kz, was run over by a truck. “We wonder about the circumstances of this...

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8 August 2007

Sudanese editor jailed over corruption stories

JUBA, Sudan, Aug 8 (Reuters) - The editor and owner of Sudan's The Citizen daily was arrested and jailed for a day because of his coverage of a corruption investigation involving high-level south Sudanese officials, he said. Southerner Nhial Bol was released on Tuesday evening from his jail in south Sudan's capital, Juba, and warned other journalists could face a worse fate because the semi...

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8 August 2007

Afghan journalists adopt 'Charter for Media and Democracy'

Media practitioners and journalists from all over Afghanistan have adopted a historic National Charter for Media and Democracy. This charter, enshrining the values of free speech and the right to information of all citizens, will constitute the basis for action by professional media unions and associations in the years ahead. The charter was adopted at a summit meeting in Kabul on July 31. The...

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8 August 2007

Iraq: AP photographer kidnapped, reporter of state-run daily goes missing

An Iraqi photographer working for the Associated Press (AP) was kidnapped in Diyala province on Tuesday, while another journalist working for state-run al-Sabah newspaper has been reported missing, acording to reports. An armed group intercepted the car of AP photographer Talal Ahmed Abdullah in central Baquba, 60 kilometres north of Baghdad, and took him to an unknown location, the independent...

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