2005-2014

21 October 2006

The evil of a murder in Russia

Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaia was murdered shortly after she entered her apartment building in central Moscow on Oct. 7. The building's security system was in working order, and she pushed the right buttons to open the door. The assassin was waiting inside. His slim figure was caught on security video. Politkovskaia's murder was one of many. On Oct. 16, Anatoly Voronin, financial director...

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21 October 2006

Hawkers confront newspaper owners over Ramadan holiday

Islamabad - Newspaper hawkers in Pakistan are up in arms against the newspaper owners' decision to observe one holiday instead of the usual two for the forthcoming end-of-Ramadan Eid festivities. The All Pakistan Newspapers Society on Saturday accused the hawkers, who have refused to distribute the newspaper published the day after Eid, of reneging on an agreement reached between them 10 years ago...

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21 October 2006

Chinese Court Frees Convicted Journalist

BEIJING (AP) - A Chinese court has freed a journalist convicted of extortion for exposing local corruption but has refused to overturn his guilty verdict, his wife said Saturday. The Intermediate People's Court in the southern city of Shaoyang ordered Yang Xiaoqing released on bail last month after he served seven months of a one-year sentence, said his wife, Gong Jie. Last Tuesday, the court...

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21 October 2006

Newspapers struggle with name accents

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - When journalist Aly Colon began his career, he always made the same request to his editors. Could he please have an accent? Colon, a Puerto Rican native, writes his name with an accent over the second "o" to distinguish it from the less than elegant body part. When his editors said they couldn't or wouldn't add the slash to his byline, Colon began adding it by hand before...

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21 October 2006

Australian media carve-up raises free speech fears

SYDNEY: New media laws in Australia have sparked takeover activity many fear will lead to a concentration of ownership in the hands of Rupert Murdoch and Australia's richest man James Packer, eroding free speech and democracy. "This is a real blow to democracy. Free speech and the multitude of voices and positions on a range of issues is at risk with this legislation," leader of the Australian...

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21 October 2006

The media hustlers

IT TOOK 36 hours for the battle lines to be redrawn on Australia's media landscape after the Howard Government succeeded in its decade-long campaign to free up ownership. Bills to water down foreign ownership limits and end the ban on media groups owning both television and print media were approved by Parliament at 12.13pm on Wednesday. Ninety minutes later, Australia's richest man, James Packer...

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21 October 2006

NZ papers seen as targets in media free-for-all

New Zealand newspapers owned by John Fairfax Holdings could be broken off and floated on the New Zealand stock market or sold to a private buyer in the frenzy of media buy-ups across the Tasman, analysts say. Fairfax's open share register - dominated by institutional shareholders - meant it was one of three Australian media companies tipped as likely takeover targets. Others were Austereo and...

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21 October 2006

Chandra to pump in Rs 100 cr in UNI

NEW DELHI: Essel Industries chairman Subhash Chandra on Friday defended his decision to acquire 51% stake in United News of India (UNI) saying he planned to pump in up to Rs 100 crore to convert it into a global news agency over the next two years. Stating that there would not be any staff retrenchment, Chandra said the initial focus is on upgrading its technology and improving its content. "We...

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20 October 2006

Court orders journalist freed but stops short of quashing his conviction

(RSF/IFEX) - RSF has hailed the news that Yang Xiaoqing, a journalist based in Longhui in the southern province of Hunan, has been released as a result of a court decision in the nearby city of Shaoyang, on 17 October 2006. Detained since 22 January, Yang had been serving a one-year sentence for alleged extortion. "Guilty but free - this decision is a half-measure that fails to cover up the fact...

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20 October 2006

As Afghan deadline looms, CPJ urges kidnappers to free journalist

New York, October 20, 2006—Ahead of the deadline set by the kidnappers of an Italian photographer in Afghanistan, the Committee to Protect Journalists appeals for his immediate safe release. Freelancer Gabriele Torsello was seized by five gunmen October 12. At first, the kidnappers set a deadline of Sunday night for their demands to be met. That has now changed to midnight Monday, according to the...

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