2005-2014

18 September 2006

Protesting newsvendors block sales of newspaper in Bolivia

(IAPA/IFEX) - MIAMI, Florida (September 18, 2006) - The Inter American Press Association (IAPA) today protested attacks on employees at the La Razón newspaper in Bolivia by street newsvendors who are boycotting distribution and sales of the paper. The free-press organization joined a demand for official action to ensure full and unfettered circulation of the paper. On Sunday (September 17), some...

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18 September 2006

French newspaper of the far Left faces financial ruin

PARIS — The end could be near for Libération, the newspaper founded by the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre and members of the extreme political left. After years of falling readership and advertising, the paper’s largest shareholder, Edouard de Rothschild, has stopped paying operating costs and, according to Pierre Haski, deputy editor of the newspaper, salaries have been frozen for October. “On Sept...

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18 September 2006

President's husband suing 42 journalists for defamation in the Philippines

(IFJ/IFEX) - The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) is shocked by reports at least 42 journalists are currently facing libel charges filed by Juan Miguel "Mike" Arroyo, the husband of Philippines President Gloria Arroyo. According to information released by IFJ affiliate, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP), the president's husband has sued 42 journalists...

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18 September 2006

Iraq: TV correspondent murdered in Ramadi

New York, September 18, 2006 - The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the murder today in Iraq of Ahmed Riyadh al-Karbouli, a correspondent for Baghdad TV. Six gunmen in two Opel cars shot the reporter/cameraman as he chatted with friends after midday prayers outside a mosque in the town of Ramadi, CPJ sources said. Al-Karbouli, 25, had received numerous death threats from insurgents over...

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18 September 2006

Hizbullah's media disadvantage

In retrospect, it should have been a given that Hizbullah would be capable of claiming “media superiority” and strength following the last war between Israel and Lebanon. However, various media sources were forced to jump at every opportunity to get information regarding Hizbullah leaders and the group’s political stand, after extended periods of silence on the part of Hassan Nasrallah and...

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18 September 2006

Journalists and Bihar bashing

"Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools talk because they have to say something" - Plato Bihar has been the favourite punching bag of the Indian English language journalist community, actually not just the journalists but many English speaking "elite" of India. We see the parody of Bihar bashing being played out everyday. Sometimes one feels upset, sometime angry and sometimes...

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18 September 2006

Disgraced journalist caught blackmailing businesses

After being tipped off, Vietnam police caught red-handed Sunday a journalist of a newspaper in Hanoi trying to extort money from a local business. Initial investigations showed Nguyen Hung Son, correspondent of the Hanoi-based Dien Dan Doanh Nghiep (Business Forum) newspaper, had coerced the Hai Van international transport company to offer him a bribery totaling US$10,000, otherwise Son would leak...

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18 September 2006

The Press Complaints Commission: The best a press can get

After years wandering the world I am, at last, thanks to the Press Complaints Commission (PCC), getting to know my own country. Since starting my first term as chairman in 2003, I have kept up a pretty steady programme of visits to editors and proprietors outside London. This has, for instance, taken me to Scotland 14 times and to Newcastle on three occasions. The PCC, based in London, must not be...

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17 September 2006

Al-Jazeera documentary continues to spur debate

(AXcess News) Washington - The documentary "Control Room," director Jehane Noujaim's film showcasing Al-Jazeera's role in the Iraq war, still ignites debate two years after its release. A panel of veteran journalists and a filmmaker convened Tuesday at the Arlington County, Va., Central Library, where participants watched and discussed the 90-minute documentary as part of the library's Cross...

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17 September 2006

Yugoslavia: Of war tribunals and contempt cases

The contempt of court proceedings against several Croatian journalists before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) are a new development in the history of the international courts that were created in the early 1990s to try senior officials suspected of war crimes or crimes against humanity. REVEALING MORE THAN CALLED FOR: The International Criminal Tribunal for...

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