Ethics and Freedom

10 February 2010

Iraq: Reuters photographer freed after US held him for 17 months without explanation

Iraqi photographer, Ibrahim Jassam, of Reuters, who had been held by the US military since his arrest on September 1, 2008, was released Wednesday. Jassam was arrested by the US military in Mahmudiyah, 30 km south of Baghdad, and was held at Camp Cropper, near Baghdad airport. Iraq’s central criminal court on November 30, 2008 said he had no case to answer and must be released, but the US army...

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9 February 2010

Cameroon: Authorities urged to account for journalists held incommunicado

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has called on Cameroon's National Security Chief Emmanuel Edou to immediately explain what has happened to two journalists, Simon Hervé Nko’o and Serge Sabouang, who were arrested by members of the General Directorate for External Investigation (DGRE), an intelligence agency, on February 5. There has been no news of them since then. “The unacceptable manner in which...

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9 February 2010

Little progress seen in Colombia: Journalists still in danger

The Day of the Journalist that Colombia celebrates Tuesday will inevitably be overshadowed by the fact that press freedom is making no progress. Despite government boasts about “successful” measures for protecting the media, endangered journalists insist that they are not any safer and this will not change until the president takes a clear position, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF)...

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5 February 2010

Mauritania: Court imposes new two-year sentence on website editor

A two-year jail sentence was passed by a court passed Thursday on Hanevy Ould Dehah, the editor of the website Taqadoumy, at the end of an incomprehensible and arbitrary trial, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). Dehah, who was not freed in December on completing a six-month sentence of a charge of violating public decency, was convicted this time on charges of violating public decency...

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5 February 2010

Belarus: Authorities step up pressure on independent journalists

The Belarusian police are increasingly harassing and intimidating independent journalists by charging them with relatively minor offences, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. In the latest case, Ivan Shulha, a journalist who works for the privately-owned satellite television station Belsat TV and who is an active member of the independent Belarus Association of Journalists (BAJ), was...

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4 February 2010

Rwanda: Weekly threatened with being closed for good over sleazy scoop

Umuseso, one of Rwanda’s leading independent weeklies, could be closed down as a result of case brought by the public prosecutor’s office accusing it of libel and invasion of privacy for reporting that a government minister was having an extra-marital affair with the mayor of Kigali, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). A neighbourhood court in Nyarugenge is due to issue its verdict on...

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4 February 2010

US military must explain why marines censored Haitian photographer: RSF

Three weeks after the earthquake, the Haitian press has just had its first serious run-in with the US military. Homère Cardichon, a photographer working for the daily Le Nouvelliste, had his camera confiscated by US marines Thursday while covering a demonstration by disgruntled residents outside the US embassy in the Port-au-Prince suburb of Tabarre. Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) urged culture...

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4 February 2010

Kazakh court censors at request of president’s son-in-law

A court order issued on Monday banned all Kazakh media and printing houses from publishing “any information that discredits the honor and dignity” of President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s son-in-law, a high-ranking energy executive, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has said. According to the US government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty Kazakh service, the Medeu District Court in...

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4 February 2010

Egyptian journalist sentenced to prison for defamation

An Egyptian criminal court on Tuesday sentence a journalist to one year in prison and a fine of 60,000 Egyptian pounds (US$10,500) on criminal charges filed by another journalist who is also a member of parliament, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. According to local news reports, Yasser Barakat, editor-in-chief of the weekly Al-Mougaz was convicted of defamation in a suit...

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4 February 2010

New Iraq media rules reflect return to authoritarianism

An Iraqi government plan to impose restrictive rules on broadcast news media represents an alarming return to authoritarianism, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has said. New York-based CPJ denounced the rules and called on Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his government to abandon their repressive plan. CPJ’s review of the plan found rules that fall well short of international...

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