Europe - Central Asia

17 March 2008

Azerbaijani journalist, stabbed in the chest last week, is discharged from hospital

A journalist with a leading Azerbaijani newspaper who had to be hospitalised last week after being stabbed in the chest by a miscreant, has been released. acording to Arif Aliyev, chairman of the Editors Association Yeni Nasil, Four unidentified assailants encircled Agil Khalil, a reporter with the opposition daily Azadlig (Freedom), as he was leaving his office in the evening of March 13. One...

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12 March 2008

Swedish editor threatened over Jesus defecation poster

The editor of a Swedish newspaper has received death threats for publishing a picture of Jesus being defecated on by the devil, acording to a report in the Local website. Östgöta Correspondenten editor Ola Sigvardsson has received several death threats since the publication of the picture, which featured on posters for a punk festival. The poster depicted a Satan figure defecating on Jesus...

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8 March 2008

Azerbaijani editor slammed with four-year prison sentence

The editor of an opposition daily in Azerbaijan has been sentenced to a four-year prison term on charges of hooliganism and inflicting minor bodily harm in November. He has been in custody ever since. Acording to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Genimet Zakhidov, editor the daily Azadlyg (Freedom), was secretly brought to the Yasamal District Court in Azerbaijan’s capital...

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8 March 2008

Libel laws crippling Belarus as state gets back at critical newspapers

The Belarus government has been making selective use of politically motivated civil libel lawsuits against critics. Intolerant officials punish what remains of Belarus’ independent media with lawsuits that result in exorbitant fines, further debilitating the outlets. Since 1999, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has documented such targeted attacks against at least five

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6 March 2008

House of Lords shows the way, decides to throw out blasphemy laws

Blasphemy laws are on their way out of the United Kingdom (UK). The House of Lords voted Wednesday night in favour of abolishing the criminal offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel from the common law. By a vote of 148-87, the lawmakers adopted Amendment 144B to the government-sponsored Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill. The full Bill has not yet received final approval from parliament...

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5 March 2008

Armenian emergency paralyses news flow

The state of emergency which Armenian President Robert Kocharyan proclaimed in capital Yerevan on Saturday last is having a serious impact on the activity of the news media, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has said. The emergency was declared after clashes between security forces and opposition protesters who say last month’s presidential election was rigged. “This authoritarian decision to liable...

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5 March 2008

State control measures over reporters mars Russian presidential elections

Press freedom violations marred Russia’s presidential election on March 2, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). “The incidents that occurred during the election are indicative of the nervousness that the authorities feel towards independent journalists,” Paris-based RSF said in a statement. In South Sakhalin, reporter Pavel Abakumov of the weekly Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Tvoya Gazeta was...

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4 March 2008

As Yerevan burned, Armenian journalists remained glued to polls in Russia

As riots tore through Armenian capital Yerevan, the country's journalists remained preocupied with the presidential elections in neighbouring Russia. The people of the city had to fall back on outside news sources to know what was happenning in their own backyard. And now, with Armenian President Robert Kocharian declaring an emergency to control the violence, among the first to face its brunt has

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3 March 2008

Spain's media upstarts wooed by politicians

Spanish politicians competing for next month's election are wooing free newspapers, whose readership now outstrips the traditional press, says a Reuters report. A free daily diet of entertainment and human interest stories geared to the Internet generation, with politics limited and simplified, has seen freesheet circulation rise to about 1 million readers each per day. This is double the...

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29 February 2008

Television channels giving their best shot for Putin

Outgoing Russian President Vladimir Putin and his chosen successor Dmitry Medvedev are benefitting from partisan broadcast media coverage in their favour, presidential election monitoring by the Centre for Journalism in Extreme Situations (CJES) has shown. CJES Thursday released results of its monitoring of media coverage of candidates for the March 2 presidential election as well as of the

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