Ethics and Freedom

26 November 2008
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Singapore High Court fines Wall Street Journal Asia for comments on judiciary

Singapore High Court fines Wall Street Journal Asia for comments on judiciary

Singapore's High Court has found the Wall Street Journal Asia in contempt of court for a commentary it published about the city-state in June and July. The court fined Dow Jones Publishing Co (Asia), a subsidiary of News Corp's Dow Jones & Co unit and publisher of the Wall Street Journal's Asian edition, 25,000 Singapore dollars (US$16,573)—the highest amount ever levied for such a case in...

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25 November 2008

Take hate speech out of Canada human rights code, urges report

A new report to Canada's Human Right Commission says the law should be changed so the federal agency no longer investigates complaints relating to hate speech. Richard Moon, a professor at the University of Windsor, Ontario, who authored the report, says the section of the Canadian Human Rights Act that prohibits communication that exposes people to hate should be repealed. The commission launched...

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25 November 2008
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French TV journalist asked by court to reveal sources for report on Moroccan arrest warrants

French TV journalist asked by court to reveal sources for report on Moroccan arrest warrants

Joseph Tual, a journalist with the French state-owned TV station France 3, was recently questionedby a court in Lille on suspicion of "violating professional confidentiality" in a report about new developments in the investigation into the 1965 disappearance of Moroccan opposition politician Medhi Ben Barka in Paris. Tual was summoned to a Lille court on November 20 in response to a complaint...

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25 November 2008

Slovak broadcaster ordered to pay libel damages for paraphrasing interior minister

The Bratislava Regional Court has ordered Slovak broadcaster Radio Viva to pay over EUR 30,000 in libel damages to a Slovak judge, in connection with a 2004 report on fraud charges brought against him. The report—an item in a regular evening news broadcast—was based on comments made by then Interior Minister Vladimír Palko at an official press conference. The court found that a statement made by...

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25 November 2008

German Telekom steps up surveillance against journalists and trade unions

The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) has expressed great concern over the extent of surveillance by the German Telekom including against journalists, which has taken alarming dimensions in Germany. “It is not acceptable that Telekom could misuse data retention to violate protection of sources and press freedom by engaging in surveillance of journalists, work council representatives and...

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22 November 2008
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Court sentences Burmese blogger to 45 years in prison over Cyclone Nargis video

Court sentences Burmese blogger to 45 years in prison over Cyclone Nargis video

A Burmese court sentenced entertainer, blogger, and activist Maung Thura—known by his stage name, "Zarganar"—to 45 years in prison on November 20 for violations of the Electronics Act, according to Burmese rights groups and international news reports. Sports journalist Zaw Thet Htwe, and two other defendants were also sentenced to at least 15 years each in the same trial. All four still face...

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22 November 2008

Judge orders arrest of Colombian newsmagazine director over defamation suit

A Bogotá judge has ordered the arrest of Colombian journalist Alejandro Santos Rubino, the director of weekly newsmagazine Semana, for failing to follow the court's instructions in a defamation suit, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. Judge Amanda Vargas de Norato of the Penal Circuit of Bogotá issued an arrest warrant for Santos on Thursday after Semana did not follow the...

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22 November 2008

Political essayist in China gets three years in prison for three articles posted online

A court in China's southwestern Sichuan province sentenced Chen Daojun, a writer critical of the government, to three years in prison on charges of inciting subversion of state power. His wife Zeng Qirong told the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) that she was present in the courtroom in the provincial capital, Chengdu, when her husband was sentenced after 30-minute trial...

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22 November 2008

Five TV journalists in DRC released after being held for 24 hours over new bulletin

Authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have released five journalists of privately-owned Raga TV, after they were arrested on November 19 and held for 24 hours at an undisclosed location, according to Reporters sans Frontières (RSF). “We were all released this evening. We were in trouble over the broadcast of an interview with an opposition figure who made comments seen as offensive...

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20 November 2008
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Reuters photographer detained by US forces in Iraq for over 80 days without charge

Reuters photographer detained by US forces in Iraq for over 80 days without charge

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) and the Journalistic Freedom Observatory (JFO) have renewed their call for the release of photographer Ibrahim Jassam of Reuters news agency, who has been detained by the US Army since September 1, 2008. A contingent of US and Iraqi forces took Jassam from his home in Mahmudiyah in the south of the capital, seizing four cameras, his phone and his laptop computer. He...

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