News

4 September 2006

Malawi busts journalist for the first time

Lilongwe (AND) A journalist with the Business Day of Malawi, Maxwell Ng'ambi was this afternoon convicted for criminal libel, the first journalist to be convicted since the country gained its independence from Rhodesia in 1964. The Lilongwe first grade magistrate court allowed Ng'ambi to pay an option of a $100 for criminal libel. The journalist has since paid the fine as admission of guilt...

More
4 September 2006

After Beslan, the media in shackles

MOSCOW -- Two years ago the new school term began in horror for the town of Beslan in North Ossetia. Chechen terrorists seized School Number One, and in the tragic events that followed, more than 330 civilians were killed, including 186 children. Today the organized relatives of Beslan victims claim that the officials have done nothing to establish the real picture of the tragedy. "It is obvious...

More
4 September 2006

Sri Lanka: Journalist’s abduction highlights intimidation of media

An unidentified group of gunmen kidnapped Nadarajah Kuruparan, a senior Tamil radio journalist in Sri Lanka, last Tuesday and held him captive for nearly 24 hours. While it remains unclear exactly who carried out the abduction, there is every reason to believe that the military, or Tamil paramilitary groups aligned with the military, was responsible. The Colombo government and the military have...

More
3 September 2006

Pakistani intelligence grills Afghan journalist

QUETTA, Sep 1 (Pajhwok Afghan News): An Afghan journalist was arrested and later released by Pakistani security agencies on Chaman - Spin Boldak border crossing on Thursday. Ghousuddin Firoten, an Afghan national and correspondent of the Prague-based Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, was detained by intelligence officials as he crossed into Pakistan on Thursday morning. The intelligence officials...

More
3 September 2006

Iraqi AFP journalist kidnapped

An Iraqi freelance journalist working as a stringer for news agency Agence France-Presse has been abducted in Baghdad after visiting a relative in a government-run jail. Bilal Abdelrahman al-Obeidi disappeared on August 14 after he visited a detention centre near the Interior Ministry in central Baghdad to see his cousin. Mr Obeidi's family and AFP have been in contact with his captors using his...

More
3 September 2006

Puppet Arab media and the Lebanon War

There is an Arabic TV channel dying to keep alive the debate on “mughamaraat” (adventures). Since the crippled cease-fire in Lebanon, there is a concerted attempt (otherwise, why are the viewers strangled with monotony?) to discredit the resistance fighters. So the “experts” are logging in many many-hours to prove to the Muslim public (which is no more for sale) that it was the unwarranted risk...

More
3 September 2006

Clearing the clutter: Shutting down weak magazines

It would be great if more magazines went out of business in the coming months. And more websites were shut down, TV shows yanked off the air, newspapers folded and radio programs unplugged. The media landscape needs to be cleared of some of its clutter. Hearst Magazines Cases in point: the closings by Hearst Magazines of Weekend and Shop, Etc. magazines, and Time Inc.'s decision to shut down the...

More
3 September 2006

Magazine shelf life getting shorter

September 3, 2006 -- Something akin to infanticide is taking place in the magazine industry. As evidenced by the closings of Celebrity Living, Sly and, most recently, For Me - all launched in 2005 - magazine life spans are getting shorter and shorter. Since 2003, survival rates for magazine launches have plummeted. Of the 454 magazines launched with a frequency of four issues per year or more in...

More
3 September 2006

Time Warner’s anxious autumn

WITH the fall comes the harvest. Or at least that’s what Richard D. Parsons and his top dogs at Time Warner have hoped for in autumns past. But regardless of how much the chief executive and his allies regroup, retool and reorganize their sprawling media empire, the stock market just yawns. Every morning when they look at Time Warner’s ticker, it’s Groundhog Day. Carl C. Icahn seems to be the only...

More
3 September 2006

Afghan magazine ties 2 cultures

WASHINGTON – Aman Feda, an Afghan-born mortgage broker, cringed at his 13-year-old niece’s choice of music, the hip-hop blaring from the car radio, the lyrics grating on his nerves as they drove home after shopping at a mall. “Why not listen to some Afghan music?” Feda asked casually. “What music?” he remembers her saying with a shrug of her shoulders. “There’s nothing.” The exchange sparked Feda...

More