News

3 April 2006

Russia: Journalist arrested in case stemming from Chechnya coverage

New York, April 3, 2006 - Moscow police have arrested journalist Boris Stomakhin after he failed to appear for a June 2004 trial on criminal charges of inciting inter-ethnic hatred in news reports about the war in Chechnya. Stomakhin edits the independent Moscow monthly newspaper Radikalnaya Politika (Radical Politics) and contributes to the pro-independence Chechnya news Web site Kavkaz-Center...

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3 April 2006

US newspapers hope to turn industry malaise

CHICAGO (AP) -- Telling stories is still the lifeblood of the newspaper business, but industry executives are worried they're not doing a good job explaining one of the biggest stories of the day: The turmoil roiling their own industry. In a remarkably bracing pep talk to his fellow publishers, Jay R. Smith, president of Cox Newspapers Inc. and outgoing chairman of the Newspaper Association of...

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3 April 2006

Mexican papers probe missing journalists

MEXICO CITY – Dozens of Mexican newspapers frustrated by fruitless police probes of slain and missing journalists simultaneously published the first in a series of reports on the cases Monday. Monday's article in Mexican and U.S.-based Spanish-language newspapers focused on the April 2005 disappearance of Alfredo Jimenez Mota, 26, who covered drug trafficking for El Imparcial, the daily newspaper...

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3 April 2006

China journalist faces charges for corruption report

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese journalist Yang Xiaoqing had told his wife he knew how to handle the risks of his job, but that was before he was arrested after reporting claims of corruption, joining the country's list of detained reporters. Yang was arrested in January after five months' hiding from police, charged with extortion after reporting claims of dishonest state property sales in his home...

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3 April 2006

Reader's Digest finds a big audience in China

CHINA'S digest Reader has seen circulation surpass 10 million in April and the twice-monthly periodical remains the country's most widely read magazine. "We are optimistic of expanding circulation as Reader still has great potential in a vast number of small cities and schools across the country as well as in the overseas market," said Peng Changcheng, the magazine's editor-in-chief. First...

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3 April 2006

Magazine sets course for an academic view

LONDON: Business travelers in Europe may spot a new magazine this week at airport newsstands, alongside august titles like The Economist and The Harvard Business Review. World Business, an unusual partnership between Haymarket Publishing, a London-based magazine house, and the international business school Insead, made its debut in Britain last week and is moving into Europe and other markets this...

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3 April 2006

Click to access little magazine

Three colleagues in a software company discover a common bond with Bengali little magazines. What do they do? Build a website to preserve Bengali little magazines, of course. Srishtisandhan ( www.srishtisandhan.com) started as a small project by software professionals Gopal Krishna Ghosh, Bhaskar Mukherjee and Purbasa Dutta, in 2003. "Each of us was related to the world of little magazines in some...

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3 April 2006

As magazine readers increasingly turn to the Web, so does Condé Nast

Getting married and wondering how you would look in a mermaid-style sheath? Brides.com, a new Web site, takes you to a virtual fitting room, lets you pick from one of four body types and examine how each would look in six different styles of gowns. Brides.com, an upgraded bridal site combining content from three different magazines, comes from Condé Nast, which, like many magazine publishers, is...

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2 April 2006

Suspended Saudi newspaper returns

Saudi Arabia’s youth newspaper Shams has started publishing again, three weeks after being suspend by authorities for printing the controversial cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. The paper’s editor-in-chief, Battal Koss, was fired as a result of the row and has been replaced by Khalaf Harby. The paper landed itself in hot water in the Kingdom after reprinting the Danish cartoons next to an article...

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2 April 2006

Irfan murder: Again hostile witness, again not guilty

New Delhi, March 31: ALL the five people accused of killing Outlook cartoonist Irfan Hussein to steal his car seven years ago were acquitted by a trial court here today. Additional Sessions Judge Talwant Singh acquitted the accused saying the prosecution had "not been able to link the accused with the commission of crime beyond reasonable doubt". The case unravelled when key witness Banwari Lal...

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