2005-2014

2 July 2006

Readership declining, says Philippines newspaper dealers

THE Newspaper and Magazine Dealers Association of the Philippines (MDAP) says newspaper readership is declining steadily. Lawyer Raymund J.A. Mercado, MDAP president for Visayas, echoed the consensus of association members nationwide after attending the MDAP summit at the Development Academy of the Philippines on June 15 and 16. "The decline could be attributed to the onset of news on the net and...

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1 July 2006

'Defamation of religion laws undermine Western principles,' says Mohammed cartoon editor

In recent days, the Iranian government has launched a campaign designed to malign the foreign press, blaming demonstrations that followed the contested June 12 presidential elections on foreign news media, particularly British and US news outlets. On June 19, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed foreign media for social unrest, calling it "evil" for allegedly misleading and agitating the...

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1 July 2006

Turkmenistan: Media coverage of leader distracts attention from real problems

PRAGUE, July 1, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov has been called outlandish, eccentric, insane, ruthless, and described as a tyrannical dictator. But the international media's comic portrayals of Niyazov distract attention from many of the very serious problems the country is facing, observers say. Turkmen citizens have no chance to enjoy ballet, opera, a philharmonic...

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30 June 2006

Cambodian editor receives death threats, faces legal action

(SEAPA/IFEX) - The editor-in-chief of a local bi-weekly newspaper, "Sralanh Khmer" ("Love Khmer"), has received death threats from and is the target of a legal action by a nephew of Prime Minister Hun Sen, reports coming out Phnom Penh say. The editor reportedly is being harassed for a published article which suggests that Sen's nephew, Hun Tho, was involved in a land-grabbing case in Northeast...

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30 June 2006

Pakistan: Three journalists detained; several others threatened

(IFJ/IFEX) - The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has denounced further violence against journalists in Pakistan after a recent attack on the Peshawar Press Club by activists of the Pakistan Muslim League, injuring newsmen and staff members of the club. "The recent increasing levels of attacks against journalists in Pakistan is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. Press freedom...

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30 June 2006

Maoist leader in Nepal expresses commitment to press freedom

(FNJ/IFEX) - Maoist chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal, alias Prachanda, has expressed Maoists' commitment towards press freedom, multiparty democracy and human rights. Addressing an interaction organized by the Federation of Nepalese Journalists (FNJ) in the capital on Thursday (29th June 2006), the Maoist supreme leader said that the development of the Nepalese media after 1990 has been positive. He...

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30 June 2006

IFJ fears press freedom in Sri Lanka heading backwards

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) is deeply concerned over recent events in Sri Lanka that indicate the press freedom situation is deteriorating. “The recent closure of some satellite services by the government and a decision to bring back a state media regulatory body, as well as the continued accusations by members of government and the media against Tamil journalists and their...

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30 June 2006

Reform of Sri Lanka’s media gets broad political backing

In an historic move, the Government of Sri Lanka and two of the country’s leading political parties have offered broad support to reforming the country’s media in moves aimed to have all media institutions embrace public service values. Public service values in media are an essential part of the peace-building and reconciliation process and for reconstruction and rehabilitation after the...

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30 June 2006

Russia: Bill seeks to label critical journalists extremists

New York, June 30, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists is alarmed by a bill before the Russian Parliament that broadens the definition of extremism to include media criticism of public officials. The draft legislation allows for imprisonment of up to three years for journalists, and the suspension or closure of their publication, if convicted of extremism, according to Russian press reports...

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30 June 2006

Nigeria sedition case raises free speech concerns

ABUJA (Reuters) - A decision to charge two Nigerian journalists with sedition for saying a new presidential jet was second-hand has outraged human rights activists who fear free speech is under threat ahead of next year's elections. Nigerian and foreign rights groups accuse the government of Africa's most populous country of intolerance towards critics and disregard for the law, arguing that...

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