2005-2014

15 June 2007

Global media keeps watch on Fiji

THE Commonwealth Press Union (CPU) is keeping international groups informed of the situation in Fiji following the detention and deportation of New Zealand journalist Michael Field. CPU secretary of the Media Freedom Committee, Lincoln Gould, said the body was keeping international groups such as the World Association of Newspapers in Paris and the CPU's British counterpart informed. ''Just in...

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15 June 2007

Investigative reporter shot, wounded in Moscow

New York, June 15, 2007—The Committee to Protect Journalists denounces the shooting of investigative reporter Andrei Kalitin, who had been working on a book alleging criminal dealings in Russia’s aluminum business. Kalitin, 37, was shot in the shoulder Wednesday evening as he was leaving his home to meet with a colleague, according to local media reports. He has worked as a special correspondent...

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15 June 2007

In Mali, high school essay assignment lands journalist in prison

New York, June 15, 2007— A state prosecutor in Mali jailed a journalist for an article about a high school essay assignment in which the students were asked to write about a fictional sex scandal involving a president and his mistress. Seydina Oumar Diarra, an editor for the private daily newspaper Info-Matin, was questioned for more than three hours, charged with offense to a head of state, and...

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15 June 2007

Mother of jailed Chinese journalist presses case in US

The mother of a Chinese journalist thrown in jail after US Internet giant Yahoo provided user information to the Chinese government arrived in Washington Thursday to campaign for her son’s release. “There is a lot of international concern, it is not an isolated case now,” Gao Qinsheng told AFP after meeting her American lawyer and the Washington representative of Reporters Without Borders, a press...

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15 June 2007

Dow Jones can’t have profit and integrity with Rupert Murdoch deal

THE Bancroft family, which controls Dow Jones & Co. — publisher of the Wall Street Journal — on Thursday rejected a plan designed to preserve the paper's independence and integrity if the company is sold to Rupert Murdoch. The Australian-born head of News Corp. has long coveted the Journal and recently offered $60 a share for its publicly traded parent company, which the sprawling Bancroft clan...

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15 June 2007

TV station owner suspends news programme after coverage of RCTV case

On 23 May 2007, regional UHF channel Llanovisión's news programme, "La Entrevista de Hoy", was suspended after it commented on the Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV) case. The programme was hosted by sociologist Laure Nicotra and was broadcast in the state of Barinas, southern Venezuela. Nicotra said that the measure was the result of an interview with lawyer Pedro Gonzáles, broadcast on 22 May...

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15 June 2007

Trevor Ncube receives IPA press freedom prize

(IPA/IFEX) - Geneva, Cape Town, 15 June 2007 - Publisher Trevor Ncube of Zimbabwe today received the 2007 IPA Freedom Prize for his exemplary courage in upholding freedom of expression. The murdered authors and journalists Hrant Dink of Turkey and Anna Politkovskaya of Russia also received a special prize. Rahil Dink, Hrant Dink's widow, spoke in Cape Town in memory of her late husband at the...

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15 June 2007

Recalcitrant shareholders want Yahoo to continue assisting Chinese censors

Yahoo shareholders have vetoed with an overwhelming majority the company's proposed Chinese anti-censorship policy. This comes close on the heels of the mother of jailed Chinese journalist Shi Tao announcing plans to continue with the lawsuit against Yahoo. Proposals to set up a human rights committee with the task of reviewing Yahoo’s policies around the world, specifically in China, were also...

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14 June 2007

Controversial FOI bill fails to win support in House of Lords

A controversial private members' bill to exempt MPs and peers from freedom of information laws has failed to win the support of a single member of the House of Lords. Tory former chief whip David Maclean's Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill needed a peer to come forward to sponsor it by 5pm last night, but the support was not forthcoming. Opponents have hailed the news as a triumph for...

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14 June 2007

Major Swedish newspapers could feel the pinch from press subsidy reforms

The new proposals set forth by the Swedish Department of Culture favor smaller, local papers. This could translate to an income loss of 5.5 million kronor ($763,000) for the major papers, Senska Dagbladet and Skånska Dagbladet. “…Control mechanisms will be introduced and support will be provided at a more local level,” said department secretary Martin Persson of the proposals. One such mechanism...

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