News

1 February 2003

Eyes Right

Scenes from the front lines of the American Liberal Media Expeditionary Force’s campaign to rout the forces of conservatism: CNN, which right-wingers have been known to call the "Clinton News Network," chooses as its lead commentator for George W. Bush’s spring 2002 Middle East policy speech . . . Pat Robertson. On the crucial Manhattan front, New York magazine fields as its sole national...

More
14 January 2003

Tehelka.com journalist freed on bail

Kumar Badal, a reporter with the news website Tehelka.com, was freed on bail on 13 January after six months in prison, by order of the supreme court in New Delhi. His release was welcomed by Tehelka editor Tarun Tejpal, who noted that the site had been victimised for the past two years. Bail was set at 50,000 rupees (about 1,000 euros). At the last minute, police tried to foil the court order...

More
13 January 2003

Kashmiri journalist free after seven months in detention

Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontières) welcomed the release today of Indian journalist Iftikhar Gilani but regretted that it came after seven months of detention without evidence and without trial. The organisation supported the request for compensation his lawyer plans to make to the government for the damage to his reputation as a journalist and his arbitrary detention. "This is a...

More
13 January 2003

CPJ welcomes release of Kashmiri journalist Iftikhar Gilani

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) welcomes the release from prison today of Iftikhar Gilani, New Delhi bureau chief for the Jammu-based newspaper Kashmir Times. Authorities had accused Gilani of possessing classified documents "prejudicial to the safety and security of the country," a charge they finally admitted was unsubstantiated. "Iftikhar Gilani's release is long overdue," said CPJ...

More
2 January 2003

Indian military says detained journalist Iftikhar Gilani is innocent

On 24 December 2002, RSF reiterated its call for the immediate release of detained Kashmiri journalist Iftikhar Gilani after a senior military officer told the judge in charge of the case that Gilani is innocent. On 23 December, officer O. S. Lochab, director general of the Indian military secret service, testified before Judge Sangita Dhingra Sehgal of the New Delhi Metropolitan Court that the...

More
1 January 2003

What Is Journalism Education?

One could argue that the faster we produce journalism, the more time we should be thinking about journalism, but of course the reality is just the reverse. Our breakneck, 24-7 media environment simply allows no time to contemplate what we do, or why it matters, or how to do it better. There's only time to keep shoveling--which has grave repercussions, which we should be thinking about, but there's...

More
1 January 2003

Press Rights v. Privacy

The continuing conflict between press rights and privacy rights will flare up early in the year when a federal court considers a strange and extended legal skirmish over a secretly taped 1996 phone conversation that was leaked to the press. The tape's speakers were Newt Gingrich and other prominent Republicans. The leaker was a congressman from Washington state, Jim McDermott, the top Democrat on...

More
1 January 2003

The Press and the Central Park Jogger

The crime thundered across the airwaves and onto the newsstands. On April 19, 1989, a young, white investment banker, jogging in Central Park, was bludgeoned, raped, and left to die. The police soon charged a marauding group of Harlem teens with gang rape. The tabloid headlines pumped fear into horror. WOLF PACK'S PREY, announced the New York Daily News, in its first of many page-one stories....

More
30 December 2002

Journalists complain of Kabul abuse

A journalist with Arab news channel al-Jazeera said he and an Afghan colleague were ill-treated by international peacekeepers in the Afghan capital, Kabul. Sayed Cameraman Hashmatolla Moslih - an Australian citizen - and an Afghan reporter were detained while trying to film the scene of a grenade attack on Thursday outside the main base for soldiers from the International Security Assistance Force...

More
23 December 2002

Dainik Bhaskar goes for a 'smart look'

With a circulation of 16.5 lakh copies (according to ABC for the period of January to June 2002) and a readership of 1.3 crore as indicated by the latest round of the Indian Readership Survey, Dainik Bhaskar seems to be a comfortable leader. But resting on its laurels is not a trait one can associate with the Hindi daily that recently forayed into the eight state, namely Maharashtra, adding one...

More