Ethics and Freedom

3 December 2009

Judge in Chad orders automatic seizure of all of newspaper’s issues

A court in N’Djamena Saturday ordered the automatic seizure of all issues published by the privately-owned weekly La Voix, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. “This is a political decision, one that is marred by irregularities,” said one of the newpaper’s lawyers, Jean-Bernard Padaré. La Voix hopes to continue publishing. The court could not legally order the newspaper’s closure so it...

More
1 December 2009

Syria: Newspaper journalist is latest victim of wave of arbitrary arrests and trials

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has expressed concern over Ma’an Aqil, a journalist who was arrested at his office in the Syrian government daily Al-Thawra in Damascus on November 22 by police from the national criminal investigations department, who took him to their headquarters for questioning. The police have not explained why he has been arrested. Two days after his arrest, the Union of Press...

More
30 November 2009

Chadian authorities continue to hound new weekly, seek its closure

The Chadian government has been harassing the new, privately-owned weekly La Voix. On November 28, one of its reporters was verbally abused by the interior minister and then detained for several hours while, on December 3, a court is due to rule on a government complaint challenging its legality, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. While covering the installation of a new police director...

More
24 November 2009

Journalist held in Kuwait as a result of libel action by prime minister

Kuwait’s prosecutor-general Tuesday ordered the police to continue holding journalist Mohammed Abdel Qader Al-Jassem at the headquarters of the criminal investigation department after he was take in for questioning the day before in connection with a libel suit by the prime minister and then refused to pay bail of 1,000 dinars (2,345 euros), Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. As Kuwait...

More
20 November 2009

Media in Turkey allowed to use Kurdish language but forbidden to discuss Kurdish issues

The last restrictions on the use of the Kurdish language by the Turkish news media have been lifted, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. The government gazette published a directive on November 13 indefinitely lifting all remaining restrictions on the broadcast media’s use of minority languages. Use of Kurdish had been allowed in the print media and the national public TV station TRT 6...

More
18 November 2009

Indonesia deports two foreign journalists

The Indonesian governmen has decided to deport Raimondo Bultrini, a reporter with Italy’s weekly L’Espresso, and Kumkum Dasgupta, an assistant editor with India’s Hindustan Times, for lacking accreditation, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. The two reporters were arrested and interrogated for several hours by police on Tuesday and later handed over to...

More
17 November 2009

Judge dismisses obscenity charges against Zambian newspaper editor

A Lusaka court Monday acquitted the Post editor Chansa Kabwela of a charge of “distributing obscene material” for sending the vice-president photos of a woman giving birth in a hospital car park during a strike by hospital staff, Paris-based Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. Judge Charles Kafunda dismissed the case on the grounds that there was no evidence that the photos would corrupt...

More
17 November 2009

Heavy fines but no jail for Rwandan editor convicted of defamation

Jean Bosco Gasasira, the editor of the fortnightly Umuvugizi, has been convicted on charges of defamation and invasion of privacy but has been acquitted on the more serious charge of insult and abuse, on which he had been facing a possible sentence of more than two years in prison. In its verdict and sentencing issued on November 13, the Kigali court also refrained from ordering Umuvugizi’s...

More
13 November 2009

Two journalists held after helping media probe Mumbai attacker’s background

Two Pakistani journalists, Rab Nawaz Joya and Javed Kanwal Chandor, have been held since November 10 in a police station in Okara district, in the northeastern province of Punjab, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). Although charged with theft and fraud, they were arrested for helping Pakistani and international news media get background information about Ajmal Kasab, a participant in...

More
11 November 2009

Azerbaijani bloggers receive jail sentences

Prison sentences were awarded Wednesday to two Azerbaijani video bloggers detained in July on fabricated charges of “hooliganism” and “inflicting minor bodily harm,” the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. Judge Araz Huseynov with the Sabail District Court in Baku handed Emin Milli, 30, who runs an online video blog known as ANTV, a two and a half year jail term...

More