2005-2014

24 May 2007

Media coverage of Muslims bombs

May 24, 2007 - According to a Pew Research Center poll released earlier this week, Muslim-Americans are “largely assimilated, happy with their lives, and moderate with respect to many of the issues that have divided Muslims and Westerners around the world.” The poll showed the majority surveyed have close non-Muslim friends, believe in a strong American work ethic and feel there is little conflict...

More
24 May 2007

Rebel-friendly scribes in Bihar on cop radar

Hazaribagh, May 23: Believe it or not, some journalists are backing Maoists in the state. At least the police believe so. Arrest of Jahoor Ansari, a dreaded extremist, has turned the suspicion of the force into belief. Ansari disclosed to the police the name of a journalist, who used to help him in several ways — right from collecting levy to providing information related to movement of the police...

More
24 May 2007

Reappearance of Kabul Weekly hailed

Reporters Without Borders welcomes the reappearance of the independent Kabul Weekly newspaper in news stands after an absence of several months due to financial difficulties. The press freedom organisation provided financial support to the weekly, which is edited by Faheem Dashty. "Press freedom in Afghanistan depends on the vitality of its independent newspapers, radio and TV stations and news...

More
24 May 2007

Haiti: Second radio journalist murdered in a week

François Latour, 60 ans, célèbre acteur et animateur, a été retrouvé mort le 23 mai 2007, après avoir été kidnappé à Port-au-Prince. Le publiciste animait aussi la rubrique "On achète, On vend" sur Caraïbes FM et anima pendant de longs mois sur Radio Métropole, une autre station privée, une chronique intitulée "Port-au-Prince au cours des zins". Reporters sans frontières adresse ses condoléances...

More
24 May 2007

Nigeria: Politician’s supporters ransack radio station

Reporters Without Borders voiced outrage today at a violent attack yesterday on the Broadcasting Corporation of Oyo State (BCOS), a public radio broadcaster in Ibadan, in the southwestern state of Oyo, by around 100 supporters of local politician who were angered by an announcement that state elections would go ahead today. Equipment was smashed and at least 10 journalists were hurt. “The power...

More
24 May 2007

Pakistan: Ethnic group allied with ruling party releases journalist "hit list"

(PPF/IFEX) - The Mohajir Rabita Council (MRC), an ethnic political group in Pakistan's southern province of Sindh, has issued a list of twelve Pakistani journalists it denounced as being "chauvinists", and criticized their alleged role in the violence during protest rallies held in Karachi on 12 May 2007, during the visit of the suspended Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftekhar Mohammed Chaudhary to...

More
24 May 2007

Gambia: Journalist denies charge of publishing "false information"

(MFWA/IFEX) - Lamin Fatty, a reporter with the banned Banjul-based bi-weekly "The Independent", who is standing trial at the Kanifing Magistrate's Court for publishing "false information", on 21 May 2007 denied ever publishing any "false information". The journalist told the court that, as a reporter, he only gathered facts and submitted them to the editors who hold the ultimate responsibility for...

More
24 May 2007

Kyrgyzstan: Protesters, police forcibly prevent journalists from covering demonstration

(Adil Soz/IFEX) - On 16 May 2007, "Talas turmushu" newspaper editor Kozubek Imankulov, photojournalist Berdibek Sultanmuratov and a journalist for the National TV/Radio Corporation, Salamat Nazarkulov, were rudely prevented from carrying out their professional activities during a demonstration in Aksai village, southern Kyrgyzstan. The protesters, who demanded that the gold mine Zherui Andash be...

More
23 May 2007

It's different in France: Journos oust 'Le Monde' chairman

CHICAGO: When a big-city newspaper's circulation starts falling in the United States, reporters and editors fret about impending layoffs. But apparently when circs go south in France, it's the journalists who do the firing. As Kim Wilsher, reporting in Paris for The Guardian in Manchester, U.K., writes Wednesday, the reporters and editors voted to dismiss the chairman of Le Monde, the Parisian...

More
23 May 2007

Nigeria: Two journalists in hiding for arrest warrants, third gets death threats

Reporters Without Borders today deplored the appalling threats and constraints under which Nigerian journalists work, with two of them currently in hiding because of an arrest order issued by a judge on 16 May and third receiving repeated telephone threats because of an article published yesterday. “The absence of change at the head of the federal government apparently means that nothing will...

More