2005-2014

24 June 2006

Russian reporter murder suspect to be tried in Moldova - official

CHISINAU, June 24 (RIA Novosti, Vladimir Novosadyuk) - Moldovan national Igor Velchev, suspected of killing Russian journalist Ilya Zimin February 26, will be tried in his country, Moldova's first deputy prosecutor general said Saturday. Valery Gurbulya said it was "international practice when a person charged with such crimes is tried by the country whose national he is, [and] extradition in such...

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24 June 2006

French editor forced out over pictures of politician's wife

France's tangled approach to privacy and public figures was thrown into further confusion yesterday by the removal of a magazine editor who published photographs that offended a presidential front runner. Nicolas Sarkozy, the interior minister, was furious when Paris Match, which has a weekly circulation of about a million, last summer published images of his wife, Cécilia, in the company of a man...

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23 June 2006

Content regulation draft to be redone

NEW DELHI: Unhappy with the draft that has been prepared on content regulation, information and broadcasting secretary SK Arora has asked the panel responsible to rework it. Though no specific reasons were cited, the ministry is apparently unhappy with the way some of the issues have been dealt with as also the length of the 65-page draft, which is seen as being too unwieldy. Earlier in the week...

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23 June 2006

Nepalese media scandalised by reports of cheap graft

KATHMANDU: The Nepalese media that was vibrant and proud even during 14 months of King Gyanendra's absolute rule is today hanging down its head in shame amid reports that journalists received money from the Royal government. The Nepalese government revealed that about 90 journalists affiliated with various news media received money during the period of royal direct rule to "write about the peace...

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23 June 2006

Canadian newspapers reject merger watchdog

OTTAWA—The newspaper industry has reacted negatively to a Senate committee recommendation that the Competition Act should be changed so that media mergers are reviewed and then approved by the government. Calling the recommendation "troubling," Anna Kothawala of the Canadian Newspaper Association said yesterday that the committee was being inconsistent. "In one breath they say that they are not...

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23 June 2006

Pakistan now a black hole for the media

Journalist Hayatullah Khan took a photo of something Pakistan's government said was never there. Within days he disappeared without a trace, dragged off by masked men. Last week, six months after his abduction, his body was found dumped in North Waziristan, handcuffed and shot in the back. The tragic news has startled the nation, sparking protests, and the government ordered a judicial probe into...

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23 June 2006

Bangladeshi journalist was sacrificed to appease Islamists

In March 2004, WorldNetDaily reported on Bangladeshi journalist Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury and my efforts to free him. Choudhury, a Muslim, was accused of spying for Israel after his 2003 articles warned Bangladeshis about the rise of Islamists there, urged his country to recognize Israel, and advocated religious equality and mutual respect. Then, as he was about to board a plane for Bangkok on...

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23 June 2006

Media refuses to hold US surveillance story

NEW YORK - The Bush administration and The New York Times are again at odds over national security, this time with new reports of a broad government effort to track global financial transfers. The newspaper, which in December broke news of an effort by the National Security Agency to monitor Americans' telephone calls and e-mails, declined a White House request not to publish a story about the...

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23 June 2006

DRC: Journalist convicted in secret in defamation case

New York, June 23, 2006—A journalist imprisoned in the Democratic Republic of Congo since April on defamation charges was secretly convicted and sentenced to four months in jail over a week ago, a press freedom group reported today. The Kinshasa-based organization, Journaliste en Danger (JED), told the Committee to Protect Journalists that one of its lawyers found evidence of the verdict in a...

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23 June 2006

Panama: CPJ alarmed by plan to double jail time for defamation

New York, June 23, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists is alarmed by a proposal sent to Panama’s President Martín Torrijos to stiffen penalties for defamation, including a doubling of prison terms. A commission of lawyers and academics, which was set up by Torrijos to examine penal code reform, made the proposals in a draft bill last week, Jean Marcel Chéry, a reporter for the Panama City...

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