2005-2014

21 September 2006

LA Times editor crosses the bottom line

Dean Baquet is taking a stand. The editor of the Los Angeles Times is putting his career on the line, telling his corporate bosses at the Tribune Co. that he cannot abide deeper cutbacks in a newsroom that has already lost more than 200 jobs since the Chicago conglomerate bought the paper six years ago. If the company keeps slashing away, colleagues say, Baquet is prepared to leave. "I think it's...

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21 September 2006

Tunisia seizes French newspaper over Islam remark

TUNIS - Tunisia has confiscated Tuesday's edition of French newspaper Le Figaro because its content insulted Islam and the Prophet Mohammad, an official source said on Wednesday. The daily ran an article by philosopher Robert Redeker on the controversy over the Pope's remarks on Islam in which Redeker described the Koran as a "book of unprecedented violence" and accused Muslims of seeking to...

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21 September 2006

Pham Xuan An, 79; Reporter for Time, Spy for Viet Cong

Pham Xuan An, 79, the Viet Cong colonel who worked as a reporter for U.S. news organizations during the Vietnam War while also spying for the communists, died of emphysema Sept. 20 in a military hospital in the former Saigon, now known as Ho Chi Minh City. The secret of Mr. Pham's double life was kept for almost 30 years, from 1959 until the 1980s. He was the first Vietnamese to be a full-time...

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21 September 2006

Arrested, missing Uzbek journalists felt threatened

PRAGUE, September 21, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- A Swedish journalist specialized in Central Asian affairs says an independent Uzbek reporter who has gone missing, Jamshid Karimov, recently wrote her to say he feared he might be arrested. Speaking to RFE/RL's Uzbek Service, Elin Jonsson said she heard similar concerns from another independent Uzbek journalist who was detained a few days after. Jamshid...

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21 September 2006

Rusian journalist on trial for satirizing Putin

New York, September 21, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists is deeply concerned by the prosecution for criminal insult of a Russian journalist who satirized President Vladimir Putin’s campaign to boost the birth rate. Vladimir Rakhmankov, editor-in-chief of the independent news Web site Kursiv, went on trial today in the city of Ivanovo, northeast of Moscow, charged with insulting the...

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21 September 2006

In Thailand, moves by military junta threaten press freedom

New York, September 21, 2006—As Thailand’s new ruling military junta imposed restrictions on the media, the Committee to Protect Journalists today called on the transitional authority to uphold the press freedom guarantees enshrined in the recently dissolved 1997 constitution. The ruling Council for Democratic Reform under Constitutional Monarchy (CDRM) called a meeting today with senior media...

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21 September 2006

What makes a good school of journalism

JOURNALISM courses run by the University of the Sunshine Coast, the University of Western Sydney and the private Brisbane college Jschool have been judged the best by their students. All the graduates of those courses who returned questionnaires in the annual Graduate Careers Council of Australia survey said they were very satisfied or satisfied. Rounding out the top five were Perth's Murdoch...

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21 September 2006

Watch That Box for Al Jazeera, and More

LONDON, Sep 21 (IPS) - The appearance of an English language service from Al Jazeera television will mark more than expansion of a company; it will come as one of the biggest challenges yet to the dominance of Western news providers, academics say. "The forthcoming launch of Al Jazeera International, the English language edition of the pan-Arabic news network, is likely to influence the way...

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20 September 2006

Iran cracks down on press

Few were surprised by last Monday's ban on Iran's leading reformist newspaper, Shargh (East), which has, for some time, boldly voiced dissatisfaction with the outcome of last year's elections that brought President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power. The newspaper ran a cartoon the previous Thursday depicting a donkey -- a symbol of ignorance in Iranian culture -- with a halo around its head, braying at...

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20 September 2006

HP's chief executive linked to journalist probe

Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd has for the first time been linked to an elaborate sting operation targeting a CNET News.com reporter that lies at the heart of the company's attempts to determine the source of a boardroom leak. The Washington Post reported on its Web site late Wednesday night that an internal e-mail sent by HP Chairman Patricia Dunn indicated that Hurd approved of an e-mail ruse...

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