2005-2014

2 July 2006

Journalists and 'leakers' feel heat around globe

NEW YORK — Headline by headline, a trickle of news leaks on Iraq and the antiterror campaign has grown into a steady stream of revelations, and from Pennsylvania Avenue to Downing Street, Copenhagen to Canberra, governments are responding with pressure and prosecutions. The latest target is The New York Times. But the unfolding story begins as far back as 2003, when British weapons expert David...

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2 July 2006

Journalists slam Egypt Press Freedom Bill

Egypt’s Journalists Union is criticizing a press freedom bill, claiming it defends corruption and constitutes a step backwards in the state of freedom of press. As of Monday, union members will begin an open protest against the bill, which they say limits press freedom. The government is discussing the bill on Sunday. Egypt’s government has amended a contentious law that allows the Egyptian...

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2 July 2006

Surveillance, security and the press

The story that most aroused N&O readers in the past week has to do with the press and national security. When is it appropriate for newspapers to publish information that could jeopardize our common safety and well-being? The question arises from the disclosure in The New York Times and other national papers, and reported subsequently in The News & Observer, that the government is monitoring an...

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2 July 2006

Secrecy, security, the president and the press

THE Bush administration's unusually harsh attacks on The New York Times for exposing a secret banking-data surveillance program have turned a glaring spotlight on the paper's decision to publish the article. President Bush, Vice President Cheney and Republican legislators have singled out The Times in recent days for disclosing the counterterrorism program, even though The Los Angeles Times and...

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2 July 2006

A history of publishing, and not publishing, secrets

WHEN government officials ask journalists to withhold information on national security grounds, they face a natural skepticism. Many reporters believe that the government routinely exaggerates the need for secrecy. They suspect that security officials try to snuff reporting that is merely embarrassing or at most politically troublesome. And most journalists are deeply reluctant to pass up a scoop...

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2 July 2006

In war on terror, reporters wind up in the cross hairs

Tampa radio personality Tedd Webb has one thing to offer reporters - or anyone else - who reveals details of any secret government program aimed at fighting terrorism during the current war. A bullet. Sparked by several newspapers' publication of stories on the Treasury Department's monitoring of terrorist suspects' money transfers worldwide, Webb told listeners to his radio show on WFLA-AM 970...

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2 July 2006

They told me I'd be the next reporter to die

THE voice on the telephone was that of a trusted contact whose advice on security in Iraq has often been a source of reassurance. But the message he passed on last Wednesday and the urgency of his tone could hardly have been more alarming: my name had been placed on a hit list by one of the groups whose death threats have spread fear through countless communities in this stricken country. “A...

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2 July 2006

Journalist shot dead in Sri Lanka

Colombo - A journalist who reported on defence matters and worked as a government press advisor was shot dead by unidentified killers outside Sri Lanka's capital, police said Sunday. The bullet-riddled body of Lakmal Sampath was found by police on Sunday morning at Dehiwala, eight kilometres south of Colombo, police said. He was a former defence correspondent for a Sinhala-language newspaper...

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2 July 2006

Mexican elections: A maturing media at work

MEXICO CITY - In the old days, working the news media during a Mexican presidential campaign was a pretty simple affair: The ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, routinely pressured and/or bribed newspapers and radio and television stations to run stories favorable to the government. For the most part, the media complied. So airtight was the alliance between the major media and the...

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2 July 2006

Tooting newspapers' own horns

Newspapers have long said that businesses must advertise to survive - but they've been reluctant to follow that advice. Until now. The new owners of The Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News, and their Web site, Philly.com, pledge to spend at least $5 million to advertise and promote their new property, for which they paid $515 million on Thursday. That kind of spending - about 1 percent of...

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