News

6 March 2009

RSF calls on EU to suspend development aid in to Eritrea light of fresh crackdown on journalists

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has called on the European Union (EU) not to hand over aid worth 122 million euros to Eritrea, after a serious deterioration in conditions for political prisoners and as authorities have launched a new wave of arrests of journalists. "Who could still believe in EU's commitment to human rights when a sum like this can be given to Eritrea?" RSF asked. "Once again EU...

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5 March 2009

Swiss TV reporter Christoph Müller arrested, later released but not allowed to leave Thailand

Christoph Müller, a leading Swiss TV reporter and producer, was handcuffed and arrested on arrival in Thailand on February 27, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. He was freed on bail 24 hours later but the police confiscated his passport and he is not allowed to leave the country until further notice. His employer, the German-language Swiss TV station SF, has described the measures as a...

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5 March 2009

Russian journalist receives death threats after writing about extremist organisation

Oleg Salnikov, author of the article "Ordinary Fascism Attempts to Take Root on These Isles" published by the newspaper Gubernskiye Vedomosti, has been receiving death threats, according to the Glasnost Defence Foundation (GDF) . The story about an extremist organisation led by two former law enforcement officers was also posted on the website of the Sakhalin-Kurily news agency, triggering a...

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5 March 2009

Copies of Ivorian newspaper destroyed following article linking high-ranking officials to corruption

Several copies of the weekly Le Nouveau Réveil newspaper were seized on March 4 from the newsstands and destroyed by two unidentified persons in Cocody and Yopougon, two suburbs of Abidjan, capital of Côte d'Ivoire, according to the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA). MFWA's correspondent reported that the publishers of Le Nouveau Réveil have since lodged a formal complaint to the Ivorian...

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4 March 2009

Algerian newspaper editor freed after a day and a half in prison

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) welcomes the release of Al-Waha editor Nedjar El-Hadj Daoud Tuesday evening in the southern city of Ghardaïa, where he had been jailed on the morning of March 2. The Algiers-based daily El Watan said he was released from the city’s prison on medical grounds. “A commission tasked with executing the court ruling decided to suspend the detention order,” Nedjar told Al...

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4 March 2009
Anger over new France case of journalists being treated as police auxiliaries or criminals

Anger over new France case of journalists being treated as police auxiliaries or criminals

A TV production company in a Parisian suburb was raided on March 2 in connection with a documentary about Martinique in which a member of the French Caribbean island’s white business elite, Alain Huyghues-Despointes, made racist comments, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) The comments sparked a controversy after the Tac Presse documentary, called “The Last Masters of Martinique” and...

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4 March 2009

Prosecutors in Russia appeal against Politkovskaya murder trial acquittal

The Russian prosecutor-general’s office has filed an appeal before the supreme court against the acquittal of three men who were accused in connection with the 2006 murder of Novaya Gazeta reporter Anna Politkovskaya. A jury found the three men not guilty on February 19 at the end of a trial before a Moscow military court. “We point out that the Politkovskaya murder has not been solved,” Reporters...

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4 March 2009

Independent Kazakh newspaper faces closure after astronomical fine for "defamation"

The Almaty appeal court has been accused by press freedom groups of seeking to ruin an independent newspaper by imposing a fine that it and its journalists would find impossible to pay. A case for defamation was brought by parliament deputy, Ramin Madinov, against the editor of the weekly newspaper Tasjargan, Bakyttoul Makimbai and a journalist, Almas Koucherbayev after it carried an article on...

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4 March 2009

Leading Swiss TV reporter arrested in Thailand, then forbidden to leave country

Christoph Müller, a leading Swiss TV reporter and producer, was handcuffed and arrested on arrival in Thailand on February 27, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. He was freed on bail 24 hours later but the police confiscated his passport and he is forbidden to leave the country until further notice. His employer, the German-language Swiss TV station SF, has described the measures as a...

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4 March 2009

Army silences broadcast media in Guinea-Bissau after chief of staff and president murdered

Guinea-Bissau’s broadcast media were allowed to resume operating shortly after midday on Monday after being ordered off the air Sunday night following the murder of the armed forces chief of staff, which was followed in turn early Monday by the murder of President Joao Bernardo “Nino” Vieira. “Amid the current instability, we urge all of Guinea-Bissau’s actors, especially the armed forces, to...

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