State Persecution

23 January 2009

Fiji newspaper held in contempt over letter critical of court system and military regime

The editor of Fiji's oldest newspaper has been ordered to jail and the publication has been fined F$100,000 (NZ$104,000) for printing a letter critical of the military regime and the court system, Fairfax Media has reported. Fiji Times editor-in-chief Netani Rika has been convicted of contempt and jailed for three months with a suspended sentence for two years on a good behaviour bond. The ruling...

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23 January 2009

Journalist in Afghanistan freed after eight days, says he was arrested illegally

Nazari Paryani, the news editor of the daily Payman, has been released after eight days of detention in Kabul because of an allegedly blasphemous article that was published by mistake. Paryani was freed provisionally and still faces possible prosecution. Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has called for all charges to be dropped. Exhausted by the ordeal, Paryani on Thursday told Paris-based RSF: “I...

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23 January 2009

Community radio journalist in Ecuador released but faces criminal proceedings

Francisco Farinango, a journalist on indigenous community radio, Inti Pacha, who was arrested during protests against a new mining law in the Pichincha region, northern Ecuador on January 20, was released the next day but still faces charges of “rebellion” along with two other community members arrested with him. “Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) welcomes the release of the journalist but once...

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22 January 2009

Radio station in Malawi wins case against regulatory body

The Malawi High Court has declared that the decision by the Malawi Communications Regulatory Authority (MACRA) to revoke Joy Radio's license was unconstitutional, ultra vires and unreasonable, effectively dismissing all cases that MACRA had brought against the private radio station. According to this ruling, it means there is no case between Joy Radio and MACRA, the Media Institute of Southern...

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22 January 2009

Newspaper's eviction seen as sign of growing pressure exerted by Albania against critical media

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) has expressed concern at the recent eviction of the Albanian newspaper TemA from its premises by Minister of Economical Affairs Genc Ruli. According to SEEMO, the Minister of Economical Affairs cancelled unilaterally and without any further notice the newspaper's 20-year-old contract for the premises. An unexpected police siege followed and the...

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22 January 2009

Afghan journalist unfairly held in custody over article about religions

The Afghanistan prosecutor-general has decided to continue the detention of journalist Nazari Paryani, head of news pages on the daily Payman. He has been imprisoned at the remand jail in Kabul since January 13. “The newspaper mistakenly published an article containing ambiguous judgements about religions, but Nazari Paryani had no direct responsibility for this," Reporters sans Frontières (RSF)...

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22 January 2009

Community journalist in Ecuador arrested during indigenous people’s protests against mining law

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has demanded an explanation from the authorities about the reasons and circumstances of the arrest of community journalist Francisco Farinango in Ñaño Loma, in the Pichincha region of northern Ecuador. The reporter on Radio Intipacho was arrested January 20 with three other members of his Tupigachi community on the sidelines of nationwide demonstrations by...

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17 January 2009

Palestinian journalists employed by Iranian TV freed on bail after being held on spying charges

Israel has released two Palestinian journalists employed by the Iranian Arabic-language TV station Al-Alam after being held for 10 days on spying charges. However, they were freed on bail on January 15 and are still accused of “revealing secret information” and “transmitting information to the enemy in war time.” Khader Shahin, a Jerusalem resident and Al-Alam correspondent, was summoned for...

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17 January 2009

In highly suspicious move, terrorism charges brought against left-wing Peruvian reporter

Raúl Wiener, the head of the investigative section of the left-wing Peruvian daily La Primera, has been charged with a “crime against public peace” and “terrorism” after revealing that the same charges had been brought against 13 leading Peruvian leftists with alleged links to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. Wiener is due to be...

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17 January 2009
Vietnam announces early release of journalist jailed for exposing state corruption

Vietnam announces early release of journalist jailed for exposing state corruption

The Vietnamese government has announced the imminent early release of journalist Nguyen Viet Chien of the daily Thanh Nien, who was sentenced to two years in prison on October 15, 2008 for “abusing democratic freedom to damage state interests”, after he investigated a major corruption scandal in 2006. Public security vice-minister Le The Tiem announced that he would be released on January 17 along...

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