News

3 May 2006

Consumers drop news sources that lose trust-survey

LONDON (Reuters) - One-quarter of consumers abandoned a news source over the past year because they lost trust in its reporting, according to a new survey that also found the BBC, Fox News and Al Jazeera the most trusted brands in their respective home regions. Results of a poll of more than 10,000 adults in 10 countries by the British Broadcasting Corporation, Reuters Group Plc and The Media...

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3 May 2006

In the age of the Internet, newspapers are still big business

SEATTLE – The sun-dappled waters of Puget Sound were calm and sparkling last week, but a few blocks inland, where editors of America's daily newspapers were gathered in annual conclave, it sounded like a perfect storm was besetting their profession. It's been a tough year for the newspaper business. For many newspapers, readership is down and advertising is off. Some major newspapers have laid off...

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3 May 2006

Press Freedom: Journalists in need of protection

Since the beginning of the war in Iraq in March 2003, more journalists have been killed in that country than anywhere else in the world. The situation faced by journalists attempting to cover the events in that country highlight the need for greater international efforts to protect journalists in conflict situations. Journalists fulfil a special role in conflict situations, providing details of...

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2 May 2006

Cameroon editor beaten unconscious by opposition

afrol News, 2 May - Eric Motomu, publisher and editor of Cameroon's English-language tabloid 'The Chronicle' was beaten unconscious by the bodyguard and the driver of prominent opposition leader John Fru Ndi. While being beaten up at an opposition rally, the editor was told that his generally critical reporting of the opposition would not be accepted. Mr Fru Ndi had recently sued the editor for...

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2 May 2006

Iraq: Covering the most dangerous beat on Earth

PRAGUE, May 2, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Like so many of his colleagues, Radio Free Iraq (RFI) Baghdad bureau chief Nabil al-Haidari has had close brushes with danger. In November 2005, a car bomb ripped into the downtown hotel that housed RFI's Baghdad office. "Our former office of Radio Free Iraq in Baghdad was bombed," al-Haidari told RFE/RL. "It was really severely damaged and even now that office is...

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2 May 2006

A look at global media freedom

Media freedoms have eroded even in some of the world's most established democracies, media advocacy groups said as they prepared to mark World Press Freedom Day on Wednesday. The 16th annual observance comes as many journalists face legal restrictions, intimidation and even violence, although freedoms have increased in some countries. The U.S. military's detentions of journalists without charge in...

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2 May 2006

UN Iraq envoy urges end to deadly toll of reporters

2 May 2006 – In a message ahead of World Press Freedom Day in a country where more than 70 journalists have been killed in the past three years, the top United Nations envoy in Iraq today called on the new Government to reaffirm its commitment to protect the right of journalists to do their work free from intimidation and threats. Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s Special Representative Ashraf Qazi...

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2 May 2006

World Press Freedom Day and us: A chill in the air

UNITED NATIONS, May 2 (IPS) - As the world reflects on the best and worst places to practice journalism on Press Freedom Day Wednesday, independent writers' groups and civil liberties advocates warn that Washington's "war on terror" is putting a growing chill on the basic democratic right of free expression. "Thanks in large part to the Patriot Act, our government is once again excluding foreign...

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2 May 2006

RSF: 2005 was deadliest year for journalists in a decade

A top international group defending the rights of journalists says that 2005 was the deadliest year for the profession in a decade. Paris-based Reporters Without Borders, in its annual report, says 63 journalists and five media assistants were killed worldwide last year. It says 120 journalists are currently in prison for exercising their profession. In the report, issued on the eve of World Press...

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2 May 2006

Journalist beaten at opposition rally in Cameroon

New York, May 1, 2006 - The publisher of Cameroon's English-language tabloid The Chronicle was beaten unconscious by the bodyguard and the driver of an opposition leader, local journalists told the Committee to Protect Journalists today. Eric Motomu, who also edits the paper, told CPJ he was attacked on Friday at a rally in the opposition stronghold of Northwest Province by the two men, who work...

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