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jueves, junio 21, 2007

INTERNATIONAL Capsule Report (at least three journalists a month forced into exile to escape threats of violence, imprisonment, or harassment, CPJ report finds)

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

CAPSULE REPORT - INTERNATIONAL

21 June 2007

At least three journalists a month forced into exile to escape threats of
violence, imprisonment, or harassment, CPJ report finds

SOURCE: Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), New York

(CPJ/IFEX) - The following is an abridged version of a 19 June 2007 CPJ
special report:

Journalists in Exile
At least three journalists a month flee their home countries to escape
threats of violence, imprisonment, or harassment.

By Elisabeth Witchel and Karen Phillips

Nearly six years ago, Eritrean authorities raided the offices of the
country's private newspapers, shut them down, and detained at least 10
journalists. Tipped off by friends, Milkias Mihreteab, then editor-in-chief
of the independent weekly Keste Debena, went into hiding, narrowly escaping
arrest. He began a harrowing journey on foot across local borders before
securing passage to the United States, where he eventually was granted
political asylum.

Since coming to the United States, Mihreteab has worked a variety of jobs,
including as a coffee shop server and a security guard, but none related to
journalism. He attempted to launch a new version of his paper for other
Eritrean expatriates but couldn't afford to keep it going. He has watched
his once ardent hope of returning home within a few years wane, as more
than a dozen publishers and editors continue to languish in prison in
Eritrea today. Mihreteab still wants to go home, but the prospect is not
imminent.

His is one of 243 cases of journalists forced into exile that the Committee
to Protect Journalists has documented over the past six years.

Among the key findings: At least three journalists a month flee their home
country to escape threats of violence, imprisonment, or harassment; more
than two-thirds of the 209 journalists currently in exile have not found
opportunities to continue in their profession; and only one in seven
journalists who flees ever returns home.

Joel Simon, CPJ's executive director, deplored the conditions that have led
to the exodus of journalists in so many countries and called on governments
to do the following: investigate and offer protection when journalists are
assaulted or threatened; prosecute all parties when a journalist is
murdered; cease unlawful arrests of journalists; and reform criminal
defamation laws.

"The fact that in two out of three cases, the exiled journalists were
driven out of the profession altogether, only finishes the job of those who
seek to silence the press," Simon said.

( . . . )

The survey found that the leading reason journalists flee their homelands
is the threat of violence, followed by imprisonment or threat of
imprisonment, and harassment.

CPJ determined that 94 journalists fled their homelands after violent
assaults or death threats from fundamentalist militias, paramilitaries, and
political gangs. In some cases, they heeded ominous warnings from military
or government officials. The worst offenders in this category were
Colombia, Haiti, Afghanistan, and Rwanda, where, according to CPJ research,
50 journalists went into exile at some point during the survey period in
fear of violent attack. In many cases, authorities could not or would not
provide adequate protection for journalists, and attempts to relocate
within their countries did not bring an end to the threats.

Colombian investigative reporter Jenny Manrique moved from Bucaramanga
province to Bogotá in 2006 after receiving a steady stream of death threats
in response to her reporting on paramilitary abuses in the region. But the
threats didn't stop. Manrique finally left Colombia with the help of
regional and international press freedom organizations, including CPJ.

"When I learned that the people who were harassing me had located my house
in Bogotá and they made threatening calls that put my loved ones at risk, I
decided that it was time to do what they'd been 'requesting' me to do for
the last eight months: shut up. I had to leave the country," Manrique told
CPJ.

In the other cases, 76 journalists fled upon their release from prison or
under threat of imprisonment for their work, and 73 left after enduring
sustained harassment.

The 243 journalists surveyed by CPJ came from 36 countries, with more than
half hailing from just five: Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Colombia, and
Uzbekistan. Sixty percent were from African countries, where porous borders
and harsh press freedom conditions contribute to a steady exodus of
journalists.

North America, Europe and Africa host the most journalists in exile, with
the United States, Britain, Kenya and Canada ranking as the top four
countries of refuge in the CPJ survey.

Nearly three-quarters of the journalists currently in exile landed outside
their region; 123 sought and obtained asylum on their own or were resettled
by the U.N. High Commission for Refugees. At least three dozen ended up in
neighboring countries, in many cases unable or not permitted to find work.
Most of those are living in extreme poverty, and some have been harassed by
police who routinely shake them down, threatening to send them to refugee
camps or report them to officials in their home countries.

Over the period surveyed, 34 journalists who had gone into exile eventually
returned home when conditions seemed safer for them. Of those who returned,
86 percent resumed work in journalism, either in their former positions or
in comparable jobs. This is in sharp contrast to the journalists who
remained in exile: Just 30 percent were able to obtain jobs related to
journalism (a category that includes teaching), though larger numbers have
continued to contribute sporadically to expatriate media or media outlets
in their homelands. The vast majority, however, have had to take jobs
requiring a lower level of skills.

Pakistani journalist Majid Babar has been working in a gas station in the
United States since getting asylum in 2004. He fled Pakistan the previous
year after being harassed by authorities for working with foreign
correspondents covering terrorism.

He can't find work as a journalist even though he spent his first year in
the United States as a Humphrey Fellow in Journalism at the University of
Maryland and has kept in touch with members of the U.S. media with whom he
worked in Pakistan.

"Although I have so many friends in the mainstream media here in the United
States . . . I can't get any job with these media, because I am no longer
considered a journalist," Babar told CPJ. "I am just one among the millions
of refugees."

Forward Maisokada, coordinator of the Exiled Journalists Network, which
supports journalists in exile in Britain, urged the media in host countries
to provide a platform for exiled journalists to write about their
experiences and to keep the spotlight on mistreatment of the press.

"They can open their doors to journalists who have faced persecution," he
said.

Elisabeth Witchel is CPJ's Journalist Assistance Program Coordinator and
Karen Phillips is the Journalist Assistance Program Associate.

To read the full report, see:
http://www.cpj.org/Briefings/2007/Exiles/exiles_07.html

For further information, contact Asia Program Coordinator Bob Dietz or Asia
Program Senior Researcher Kristin Jones at CPJ, 330 Seventh Ave., New York,
NY 10001, U.S.A., tel: +1 212 465 1004, fax: +1 212 465 9568, e-mail:
asiaprogram@cpj.org, bdietz@cpj.org, Internet: http://www.cpj.org/

The information contained in this capsule report is the sole responsibility
of CPJ. In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit
CPJ.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
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Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
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Internet site: http://www.ifex.org
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INTERNATIONAL Bulletin (Trevor Ncube receives IPA press freedom prize; Hrant Dink, Anna Politkovskaya posthumously awarded special prize)

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

PRESS RELEASE - INTERNATIONAL

21 June 2007

Trevor Ncube receives IPA press freedom prize; Hrant Dink, Anna
Politkovskaya posthumously awarded special prize

SOURCE: International Publishers' Association (IPA), Geneva

(IPA/IFEX) - The following is an abridged version of a 15 June 2007 IPA
press release:

2007 IPA Freedom Prize Winner Trevor Ncube challenges African governments
on Freedom to Publish
Hrant Dink's widow receives a special award in the name of her late
husband. Anna Politkovskaya also rewarded

Geneva, Cape Town, 15 June 2007 - Publisher Trevor Ncube of Zimbabwe today
received the 2007 IPA Freedom Prize for his exemplary courage in upholding
freedom of expression. The murdered authors and journalists Hrant Dink of
Turkey and Anna Politkovskaya of Russia also received a special prize.
Rahil Dink, Hrant Dink's widow, spoke in Cape Town in memory of her late
husband at the Special Award ceremony and dinner marking the opening of the
Cape Town Book Fair. During the opening ceremony of the 2nd Cape Town Book
Fair, Zimbabwean publisher Trevor Ncube received the 2007 IPA Freedom Prize
in recognition of his exemplary courage in upholding freedom of expression
and freedom to publish in his country and internationally.

The Executive Committee of the International Publishers Association (IPA)
selected Trevor Ncube as prize winner from among many highly commendable
candidates, nominated by IPA members, individual publishers and human
rights organisations. Ana Maria Cabanellas, president of IPA, declared:
"Trevor Ncube's work as a publisher and his wholehearted support of freedom
of expression have often brought him into conflict with Zimbabwean
authorities and endangered his personal safety. Despite repeated threats of
violence and attempts to strip him of his Zimbabwean citizenship, Trevor
Ncube's newspapers have persistently continued to expose corruption and
human rights abuses in Zimbabwe, thus encouraging healthy dissent and
criticism both in the public and private sectors. We award this prize to
Trevor Ncube in deep respect for his courage as a publisher and as a salute
to the passion, the integrity, and the steadfastness that he so
marvellously demonstrates."

The full remarks of Ana Maria Cabanellas can be found at:
http://www.internationalpublishers.org

Upon receiving the Prize, Trevor Ncube said: "For Africa to claim its
rightful place in the community of nations African politicians need to
begin to understand that freedom of expression and the freedom to publish
are twin partners and not enemies in the task of creating democratic
societies. Vibrant newspapers and a book reading culture free from
political control are a vital ingredient to creating a market place of
ideas to propel Africa's growth and development. Societies which live in
perpetual fear of their politicians can never be creative and robust
nations, particularly in the knowledge-based times we live in. Africa
desperately needs to let loose the creative energies of her people by
allowing them to think and express themselves freely. Indeed, only by
setting her people free does Africa stand a chance of catching up with the
rest of the world."

Trevor Ncube's full remarks can be found at:
http://www.internationalpublishers.org

On the same occasion, IPA awarded the "2007 IPA Freedom Prize - Special
Award" to Hrant Dink and Anna Politkovskaya.

Anna Politkovskaya was the special correspondent for the Russian newspaper,
"Novaya Gazeta", who documented the horrific crimes committed in the war in
Chechnya. She was also an outspoken critic of President Vladimir Putin and
of the Kremlin's role in Chechnya. She was shot and killed in her apartment
building in Moscow on 7 October 2006, the apparent victim of a contract
killing. She was 48.

Hrant Dink, a Turk of Armenian descent, was the editor-in-chief and founder
of the Armenian-Turkish weekly newspaper "Agos", which sought to provide a
voice for the Armenian community and create a dialogue between Turks and
Armenians. In October 2006, he was convicted and given a six-month
suspended sentence for the crime of "insulting Turkishness" under Article
301 of the Turkish Penal Code. On 19 January 2007, he was shot dead on the
street in front of his Istanbul office at the age of 52. Rahil Dink, Hrant
Dink's widow, travelled to Cape Town from Istanbul to receive the
posthumous prize in the name of her late husband, a man with whom IPA had
been working closely since 2003.

Rahil Dink's full remarks can be found at:
http://www.internationalpublishers.org

Bjørn Smith-Simonsen, chair of IPA's Freedom to Publish Committee,
declared: "The murders of Dink and Politkovskaya were vile. In giving them
the "2007 IPA Freedom Prize - Special Award", we rise to celebrate their
courage, their humanity, and their witness. We rise to celebrate the free
word in the face of oppressive regimes. We remind the Turkish authorities
that Article 301 TPC needs to be abolished. We also hope that this special
award will remind the Russian and Turkish authorities that the world's
public still waits that full light is shed on these two cases and their
underlying causes. We regret the lack of progress in the investigation into
Politkovskaya's murder, and urge the Russian authorities to fulfil their
duty.

"The trial of Hrant Dink's alleged killers will be starting on 2 July 2007
in Istanbul. We will monitor this trial. Those who instigated this murder
should be identified and punished. Moreover, this trial should be held in a
transparent manner. The court should be free of pressure and intimidation
and should be able to hand down an impartial verdict."

( . . . )

For more about Trevor Ncube, Anna Politkovskaya, Hrant Dink, the IPA
Freedom Prize and the Cape Town Book Fair, see the full press release at:
http://www.internationalpublishers.org/images/pdf/PRandPublications/FTP/pr%20freedom%20prize%2020070615.pdf


For further information, contact Alexis Krikorian, director, FTP, e-mail:
krikorian@internationalpublishers.org, or IPA, 3, avenue de Miremont,
Ch-1206, Geneva, Switzerland, tel: +41 22 346 3018, fax: +41 22 347 5717,
e-mail: krikorian@ipa-uie.org, secretariat@ipa-uie.org, Internet:
http://www.internationalpublishers.org

The information contained in this press release is the sole responsibility
of IPA. In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit
IPA.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
alerts e-mail: alerts@ifex.org general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org
Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
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PHILIPPINES Flash (journalist jailed in defamation case; libel laws "outdated, excessive and unreasonable," says IFJ)

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

UPDATE - PHILIPPINES

21 June 2007

Journalist jailed in defamation case; libel laws "outdated, excessive and
unreasonable," says IFJ

SOURCE: International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), Brussels

**Updates IFEX alert on the Tesorio case of 16 May 2005; for further
information on the Adonis case, see alerts of 7 and 2 April 2007; for the
Alegre case, see alert of 19 April 2007**

(IFJ/IFEX) - The following is an IFJ media release:

The Philippines libel laws "outdated, excessive and unreasonable", says IFJ

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has renewed its calls for
the Philippines government to decriminalise libel, after another journalist
was jailed for defamation in a lawsuit issued by a former congressman.

According to IFJ affiliate, the National Union of Journalists of the
Philippines (NUJP), Jofelle Tesorio, former correspondent of the Philippine
Daily Inquirer and editor of Bandillo ng Palawan, and now with the
Bangkok-based Asia News Network, is currently being held in Camp Karingal
in Quezon City, after posting a bail sum of 20,000 pesos (approximately USD
440) on June 21. As of this writing, the judge has yet to sign her release
paper.

Tesorio was convicted for publishing a series of articles dating back to
2003 relating to former Palawan congressman Vicente Sandoval Sr., the NUJP
reports.

"The libel laws in the Philippines are outdated, excessive and
unreasonable, and they are too often abused by those with power to silence
journalists," IFJ Asia-Pacific Director Jacqueline Park said.

"No journalist should be jailed for doing their job, and the IFJ again
calls for an overhaul of libel laws in the Philippines to remove defamation
from the criminal code," Park said.

In April this year, radio journalist Alex "Lex" Adonis was jailed for four
years for libel after revealing an affair involving Davao congressman
Prospero Nograles. This was followed by the detention of Jun Alegre, a
radio reporter in Legazpi City, because of a 10-year old libel case.

The IFJ represents over 500,000 journalists in more than 115 countries.

For further information, contact the IFJ Asia-Pacific, tel: +61 2 9333
0919; or the IFJ, International Press Centre, Residence Palace, Block C,
155 Rue de la Loi, B-1040 Brussels, Belgium, tel: +322 235 2200 / 2207,
fax: +322 235 2219, e-mail: rachel.cohen@ifj.org, Internet:
http://www.ifj.org/

The information contained in this update is the sole responsibility of IFJ.
In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit IFJ.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
alerts e-mail: alerts@ifex.org general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org
Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
_________________________________________________________________

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NEPAL Flash (journalist abducted)

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

ALERT - NEPAL

21 June 2007

Journalist abducted

SOURCE: Federation of Nepalese Journalists (FNJ), Kathmandu

(FNJ/IFEX) - Hridayaraj Gautam, editor of the "Khulamanch Weekly" and a
district member of Press Chautari Nepal, was abducted from his home at 8:30
pm (local time) on 20 June 2007 by unknown individuals in Bara, a district
in central Nepal.

According to Binod Pyakurel, president of FNJ's Bara chapter, Gautam was
hosting a party at his home for friends and relatives after the name-giving
ceremony for his newborn child when two unknown persons arrived on a
motorcycle. They called him out of the house and abducted him after showing
a weapon. The identity of the abductors and the motive are still unclear.

The Federation of Nepalese Journalists (FNJ) has condemned the incident and
asked the government to start the search for Gautam immediately and take
serious action against the guilty parties. The federation also expressed
serious concern about the targeting of media personnel in Nepal's Terai
region. FNJ also draws the attention of all concerned to the safety and
security of journalists.

For further information contact R. B. Khatry, Executive Director, FNJ,
Media Village, Tilganga, Kathmandu, Nepal, tel: +977 1 449 0063 / 3873,
fax: +977 1 449 0085, e-mail: fnjnepal@mail.com.np, Internet:
http://www.fnjnepal.org

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of FNJ.
In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit FNJ.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
alerts e-mail: alerts@ifex.org general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org
Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
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LIBERIA Flash (two journalists beaten by police and UN peacekeepers, one seriously injured)

LIBERIA: Two journalists beaten by police and UN peacekeepers, one
seriously injured
LIBÉRIA: Deux journalistes brutalisés par la police et des soldats de l'ONU
lors d'une manifestation étudiante

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

ALERT - LIBERIA

21 June 2007

Two journalists beaten by police and UN peacekeepers, one seriously injured

SOURCE: Reporters sans frontières (RSF), Paris

(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters Without Borders condemns the use of violence by
members of the national police and United Nations Mission in Liberia
(UNMIL) against several journalists, including Daylue Goah of the
privately-owned daily "New Democrat" and Evans Ballah of "Public Agenda",
during a student demonstration on 19 June 2007. Goah was seriously injured.

"Such police brutality against journalists is disgraceful and
unacceptable," the press freedom organisation said. "The police and UNMIL
peacekeepers clearly lost control of the situation and used
disproportionate violence. We are amazed by the clear lack of
professionalism and self-control displayed by troops acting under UN
authority. Everything must be done to shed light on these incidents and on
the deliberate use of violence against the press, and those responsible
must be punished."

Goah and Ballah were sent by their newspapers to cover a student
demonstration against conditions on the University of Liberia campus, which
degenerated into rioting on the main streets of the capital not far from
the presidential palace and which elicited a forceful intervention by the
security forces.

The two journalists were attacked by members of a joint Liberian National
Police and UNMIL unit, who tore up their ID cards and forced them to delete
the photos from their digital cameras. Witnesses said Goah was beaten on
the neck and arms with batons and rifle butts by a member of the Special
Security Service (which protects the president) and a Nigerian peacekeeper.

He managed to escape and tried to get another soldier to protect him.
Instead the two soldiers resumed beating him until he lost consciousness.
Civilians took him to a hospital, where he is reportedly in a serious
condition and unable to talk.

According to Liberian press reports, several other journalists were also
beaten by the police and UNMIL.

For further information, contact Léonard Vincent at RSF, 5, rue Geoffroy
Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 84, fax: +33 1 45 23 11 51,
e-mail: africa@rsf.org, Internet: http://www.rsf.org

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of RSF.
In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit RSF.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
alerts email: alerts@ifex.org general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org
Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
_________________________________________________________________
IFEX - Nouvelles de la communauté internationale de défense de la liberté
d'expression
_________________________________________________________________

ALERTE - LIBÉRIA

Le 21 juin 2007

Deux journalistes brutalisés par la police et des soldats de l'ONU lors
d'une manifestation étudiante

SOURCE: Reporters sans frontières (RSF), Paris

(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters sans frontières dénonce les violences exercées par
des membres de la police nationale libérienne et des soldats de la Mission
des Nations unies au Liberia (UNMIL) à l'encontre de plusieurs
journalistes, dont Daylue Goah, journaliste du quotidien privé "New
Democrat" et Evans Ballah, de "Public Agenda", sérieusement blessés.

"Ces brutalités policières contre les journalistes sont indignes et
inacceptables. La police libérienne et les troupes de l'UNMIL ont
manifestement perdu le contrôle de la situation et ont fait un usage
disproportionné de la violence. Nous sommes sidérés du manque évident de
professionnalisme et de sang-froid de la part de soldats agissant sous
l'autorité de l'ONU. Toute la lumière doit être faite sur ces incidents et
sur les violences qui ont été exercées sciemment contre la presse. Les
responsables doivent être sanctionnés", a déclaré l'organisation.

Lors d'une intervention musclée des forces de l'ordre sur le campus de
l'Université du Liberia, à Monrovia, le 19 juin 2007, Daylue Goah et Evans
Ballah ont été pris à partie par une unité combinée de la Liberian National
Police et de l'UNMIL. Les journalistes avaient été dépêchés par leurs
médias pour couvrir une manifestation d'étudiants, protestant contre leurs
conditions de travail. Après que la manifestation avait dégénéré en émeute
dans une des rues principales de la capitale, non loin du siège de la
présidence de la République, Daylue Goah et Evans Ballah ont été brutalisés
par des policiers et des soldats de l'UNMIL, qui ont déchiré leurs
documents d'identité et les ont contraints à effacer les images de leur
appareil photo numérique.

Selon un témoignage, Daylue Goah a été frappé, sur le cou et les bras, à
coups de bâton et de crosse de fusil par un officier du Special Security
Service (SSS), l'unité de protection de la présidence, et un soldat
nigérian de l'UNMIL. Le journaliste serait parvenu à s'enfuir et aurait, en
vain, tenté de se mettre sous la protection d'un soldat. Les deux
militaires n'auraient cessé de le frapper qu'après qu'il avait perdu
connaissance. Il a été transporté à l'hôpital par des civils. Sérieusement
blessé, il serait incapable de parler.

Selon les médias libériens, plusieurs autres journalistes auraient été
brutalisés par la police et l'UNMIL.

Pour tout renseignement complémentaire, veuillez contacter Léonard Vincent,
RSF, 5, rue Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tél: +33 1 44 83 84 84,
téléc: +33 1 45 23 11 51, courrier électronique: afrique@rsf.org, Internet:
http://www.rsf.org

RSF est responsable de toute information contenue dans cette alerte. En
citant cette information, prière de bien vouloir l'attribuer à RSF.
_______________________________________________________________
DIFFUSÉ(E) PAR LE SECRÉTARIAT DU RÉSEAU IFEX,
L'ÉCHANGE INTERNATIONAL DE LA LIBERTÉ D'EXPRESSION
555, rue Richmond Ouest, Bureau 1101, B.P. 407
Toronto (Ontario) M5V 3B1 Canada
tél: +1 416 515 9622 téléc: +1 416 515 7879
courrier électronique: alerts@ifex.org boîte générale: ifex@ifex.org
site Internet: http://www.ifex.org/
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ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA Threat (two CARICOM journalists expelled without justification)

ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA: Two CARICOM journalists expelled without justification
ANTIGUA ET BARBUDA: Deux journalistes ressortissants de la CARICOM,
expulsés sans raison précise vers leur pays d'origine

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

ALERT - ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA

21 June 2007

Two CARICOM journalists expelled without justification

SOURCE: Reporters sans frontières (RSF), Paris

(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters Without Borders expressed surprise that the
government of Antigua and Barbuda expelled the former editor of the daily
"Antigua Sun", Vernon Khelawan, and a colleague of privately-owned Observer
Radio, Lennox Linton, on 12 and 13 June 2007.

Both men are citizens of countries of the Caribbean Community and Common
Market (CARICOM), with agreements allowing free movement for citizens of
its 15 member states and the worldwide press freedom organisation said it
found it hard to believe it was a straightforward administrative decision.

"The expulsion of Vernon Khelawan and Lennox Linton quite rightly gave rise
to strong feelings among journalists from the English-speaking Caribbean
and particularly within the Association of the Caribbean Media (ACM) which
represents them," the organisation said.

"The government of Antigua and Barbuda will have to explain this step,
which is contrary to the accords between CARICOM states. We hope that it is
not linked to the work of those involved," the organisation said, adding
that it would be helpful if the men's countries of origin, Dominica and
Trinidad and Tobago, reacted to the incident.

Trinidadian Khelawan and Linton, who is Dominican, were expelled 24 hours
apart, Khelawan first after he had just gone through Antigua customs upon
his arrival with no problem, and Linton the following day.

At the time of his expulsion, Khelawan, a freelance journalist, had said
that he was working on cooperation programmes between the ACM and United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO). He had
been refused renewal of his work permit when it expired in December 2006
without any reason being given. The journalist said he believed it was a
"political decision".

The CARICOM countries are linked through regional integration agreements,
particularly the Chaguaramas treaty of 1973 (amended in 1997), which set up
a common market and makes it easier for the citizen of one country to work
in another. It was on this basis that the ACM and the Antigua and Barbuda
Media Congress (ABMC) strongly reacted to the expulsion of the two
journalists, stressing their involvement in the region's professional
bodies, the privately-owned daily Guyana "Stabroek News" reported.

The states of Dominica and Trinidad and Tobago, which are signatories of
the CARICOM treaties, have made no comment about the case.

For further information, contact Benoît Hervieu at RSF, 5, rue Geoffroy
Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 68, fax: +33 1 45 23 11 51,
e-mail: ameriques@rsf.org, Internet: http://www.rsf.org

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of RSF.
In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit RSF.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
alerts e-mail: alerts@ifex.org general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org
Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
_________________________________________________________________
IFEX - Nouvelles de la communauté internationale de défense de la liberté
d'expression
_________________________________________________________________

ALERTE - ANTIGUA ET BARBUDA

Le 21 juin 2007

Deux journalistes ressortissants de la CARICOM expulsés sans raison précise
vers leur pays d'origine

SOURCE: Reporters sans frontières (RSF), Paris

(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters sans frontières est très surprise par les mesures
d'expulsion prises par le gouvernement d'Antigua et Barbuda contre l'ancien
rédacteur en chef du quotidien "Antigua Sun", Vernon Khelawan, et son
collègue de la station privée Observer Radio, Lennox Linton, les 12 et 13
juin 2007. L'organisation a du mal à croire à une simple décision
administrative, les deux hommes étant ressortissants de pays de la
Communauté du bassin des Caraïbes (CARICOM), dont les accords prévoient la
libre circulation des citoyens entre les quinze États membres.

"L'expulsion de Vernon Khelawan et de Lennox Linton a suscité, à juste
titre, une vive émotion parmi les journalistes de la Caraïbe anglophone, et
particulièrement au sein de l'Association des médias caribéens (ACM) qui
les représente. Le gouvernement d'Antigua et Barbuda se doit de fournir des
explications sur cette mesure, en principe contraire aux accords régissant
les États de la CARICOM. Nous espérons qu'elle n'est pas liée à l'activité
professionnelle des intéressés. Il serait utile que les États de la
Dominique et de Trinidad et Tobago réagissent", a déclaré l'organisation.

Vernon Khelawan, de nationalité trinidadienne, et Lennox Linton, citoyen de
l'île de la Dominique, ont été expulsés d'Antigua et Barbuda à vingt-quatre
heures d'intervalle, le premier le 12 juin, alors qu'il arrivait de
Trinidad et Tobago et venait de passer la douane d'Antigua sans problème,
et le second le lendemain. Au moment de son expulsion, Vernon Khelawan,
aujourd'hui journaliste indépendant, a confié qu'il travaillait sur des
programmes de coopération entre l'ACM et L'Organisation des Nations Unies
pour l'éducation, la science, et la culture (UNESCO). Le renouvellement de
son permis de travail, arrivé à expiration en décembre 2006, lui avait déjà
été refusé sans raison précise. Le journaliste a dénoncé une "décision
politique" à son encontre.

Les États de la CARICOM sont liés par des accords d'intégration régionale,
en particulier le traité de Chaguaramas de 1973 (révisé en 1997), qui
institue un marché commun et facilite la possibilité pour un ressortissant
d'un État de travailler dans un autre. C'est à l'appui de cet argument que
l'ACM et le Congrès des médias d'Antigua et Barbuda (ABMC) ont
vigoureusement réagi à l'expulsion des deux journalistes, en soulignant le
fort investissement de ces derniers dans les organismes professionnels de
la région, selon le quotidien privé du Guyana, "Stabroek News".

Les États de la Dominique et de Trinidad et Tobago, signataires des traités
de la CARICOM au même titre qu'Antigua et Barbuda, n'ont fait aucun
commentaire sur cette affaire.

Pour tout renseignement complémentaire, veuillez contacter Benoît Hervieu,
RSF, 5, rue Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tél: +33 1 44 83 84 68,
téléc: +33 1 45 23 11 51, courrier électronique: ameriques@rsf.org,
Internet: http://www.rsf.org

RSF est responsable de toute information contenue dans cette alerte. En
citant cette information, prière de bien vouloir l'attribuer à RSF.
_______________________________________________________________
DIFFUSÉ(E) PAR LE SECRÉTARIAT DU RÉSEAU IFEX,
L'ÉCHANGE INTERNATIONAL DE LA LIBERTÉ D'EXPRESSION
555, rue Richmond Ouest, Bureau 1101, B.P. 407
Toronto (Ontario) M5V 3B1 Canada
tél: +1 416 515 9622 téléc: +1 416 515 7879
courrier électronique: alerts@ifex.org boite générale: ifex@ifex.org
site Internet: http://www.ifex.org/
_______________________________________________________________


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YEMEN Flash (outspoken editor of Al-Shoura online newspaper detained on terrorism allegations)

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

ALERT - YEMEN

20 June 2007

Outspoken editor of Al-Shoura online newspaper detained on terrorism
allegations

SOURCE: Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), New York

**For further information on previous harassment of Abdelkarim al-Khaiwani
(Abdulkareem Al-Khaiwani) see IFEX alerts of 5 March 2007, 23, 9 and 7
March 2005, and 17 and 7 September 2004**

(CPJ/IFEX) - The following is a 20 June 2007 CPJ press release:

Yemen: Editor detained on terrorism allegations

New York, June 20, 2007 - The Committee to Protect Journalists called on
Yemeni authorities to detail terrorism accusations it has leveled against
an opposition newspaper editor detained today by government forces at his
home in the capital, Sana'a.

At around noon on Wednesday, Yemeni security agents raided the home of
Abdelkarim al-Khaiwani, editor of the online newspaper Al-Shoura, which is
affiliated with the Popular Forces Union Party, several Yemeni journalists
and local news reports said. Al-Khaiwani was brought before a state
security prosecutor charged with handling terrorism cases. He is under
investigation for allegedly having ties to a terrorist cell associated with
rebels fighting government forces in the northwestern city of Saada,
journalists and news reports said. The prosecutor ordered al-Khaiwani held
for the next seven days, those sources said.

"We are troubled by the detention of Abdelkarim al-Khaiwani, and call on
officials to publicly disclose the evidence used to hold him," said CPJ
Executive Director Joel Simon. "While the accusations are serious, we
remain concerned that al-Khaiwani is being punished for his outspokenness."

According to Yemeni press reports, al-Khaiwani is being investigated for
alleged ties to 16 men and two women recently arrested for belonging to a
terrorist cell in Sana'a said to be affiliated with rebel leader Abdel
Malik al-Hawthi. Over the last three years, Al-Hawthi, his family members,
and their followers have battled Yemeni government forces in Saada.
Fighting was heavy until a ceasefire was reached in recent days.

Al-Khaiwani has been a harsh critic of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh
and, in particular, his government's fight against the rebels.

In 2004, as editor of what was then a print weekly, al-Khaiwani was
sentenced to a year in jail for incitement, insulting the president,
publishing false news, and causing tribal and sectarian discrimination.
Articles had criticized the government's conduct in the fighting and had
accused it of fostering terrorism with its actions.

For further information, contact Joel Campagna (x103) or Ivan Karakashian
(x104) at CPJ, 330 Seventh Ave., New York, NY 10001, U.S.A., tel: +1 212
465 1004, fax: +1 212 465 9568, e-mail: mideast@cpj.org, jcampagna@cpj.org,
ivan@cpj.org; Internet: http://www.cpj.org

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of CPJ.
In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit CPJ.
_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
alerts e-mail: alerts@ifex.org general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org
Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
_________________________________________________________________


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Boletín de titulares de Periodistas-es

Nombre:Samuel Valera Yepez

E-mail:periodistascontraelcrimen@gmail.com

Nº de noticias enviadas: 4

Fecha:21-06-2007 6:05:26

 

PALESTINA:
MOVILIZACIÓN DE RSF EN PARÍS, LONDRES Y LOS PAÍSES ÁRABES AL CUMPLIRSE CIEN DÍAS DEL SECUESTRO DE ALAN JOHNSTON
http://www.periodistas-es.org/pes/artigo.asp?cod_artigo=1317

MADRID 12 JULIO 2007:
TALLER DE FOTORREPORTAJE EN LA PHOTOESCUELA DE COVER
http://www.periodistas-es.org/pes/artigo.asp?cod_artigo=1316

ESPAÑA:
LA ASOCIACIÓN DE LA PRENSA DE CÓRDOBA PREMIA A PABLO MANUEL DÍEZ
http://www.periodistas-es.org/pes/artigo.asp?cod_artigo=1315

OFERTA DE TRABAJO:
MAQUETADOR EN MADRID PARA EDITORIAL ESPECIALIZADA EN SECTOR DE MEDICINA
http://www.periodistas-es.org/pes/artigo.asp?cod_artigo=1314

Si no deseas recibir este boletín de titulares accede a tu perfil clicando aquí y marca no recibir más mailback.

miércoles, junio 20, 2007

REPORTE 409 - OBSERVATORIO LATINOAMERICANO PARA LA LIBERTAD DE EXPRESION - 20 de junio 2007

 
Editado por: Equipo de Redacción OLA    ---------------------------------------------------- 19 de junio 2007


COLOMBIA
ESTUDIANTES  UNIVERSITARIOS
AGREDEN A PERIODISTAS
 
Un grupo de estudiantes de la Universidad de Tolima se congregaron frente a las instalaciones del periódico El Nuevo Día, el pasado 13 de junio, para protestar contra la línea informativa de dicho medio de comunicación.
Días atrás salió publicado un artículo en el citado diario donde se denunciaban actos de violencia cometidos por universitarios de dicha casa de estudios superiores.
El último 12 de junio, dos reporteros de El Nuevo Día, identificados como Adriana Montealegre y Helmer Parra, fueron desalojados por la fuerza del coliseo cubierto de la Universidad de Tolima cuando cubrían una asamblea entre los estudiantes y las autoridades.
 


MÉXICO
COLUMNISTA ES AMENAZADO
REPETIDAMENTE POR FUNCIONARIO PÚBLICO
 
El columnista Francisco Rodríguez informó que ha sido amenazado de muerte en dos ocasiones en las últimas dos semanas por el mismo funcionario público. 
El autor de las amenazas, señaló el columnista, es un funcionario del Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INEGI), Lino Arturo Vera Pérez, quien se desempeña como coordinador administrativo y quien habría instruido a uno de sus allegados para que cumpla las amenazas. 
Rodríquez es columnista de más de una decena de periódicos tanto de la Ciudad de México como del interior del país, además de conducir un programa de noticias en radio que se escucha en 37 emisoras del país. Reside en la Ciudad de México, y recibió los correos con las amenazas en su buzón electrónico. 
El columnista señaló que después de conocer por primera vez las amenazas, corroboró con fuentes propias y le fue confirmado que éstas se produjeron y que el funcionario encargó a un colaborador suyo, Wenceslao Sánchez, a llevar a cabo las amenazas. 
Recibió el primer correo amenazador el último 2 de junio. El periodista escribió en su columna del día 6 de junio, "Acuso recibo de la amenaza personal y en contra de mi familia, CP Lino Vera Pérez. Ya sé que el agresor designado es Wenceslao Sánchez, quien sólo sabe y puede abusar de las mujeres del INEGI. Tomo las providencias del caso". 
En la columna del 18 de junio, el periodista señala, "Yo sueño, como muchos, morir en mi cama. Así que si, por favor, alguien puede detener preventivamente a Wenceslao, se lo voy agradecer". 
Las amenazas habrían seguido a la publicación de textos del periodista donde da cuenta de la corrupción y control que mantiene el funcionario pasando incluso por encima funcionarios de más alto nivel y el uso de métodos violentos.
 


PERÚ
ANP PROTESTA ANTE EMBAJADA DE VENEZUELA
EN DEFENSA DE LA LIBERTAD DE EXPRESIÓN
 
Bajo el lema "Ni silenciosos, ni silenciados", el gremio de la prensa peruana, encabezado por la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú, y otras organizaciones de la radio y televisión, protestarán ante la Embajada de Venezuela, este jueves 21, al mediodía, por la suspensión de las transmisiones de Radio Caracas Televisión y en solidaridad con los periodistas venezolanos. 
Al acto en protesta ante los hechos que colisionan gravemente los derechos de pensamiento, opinión, expresión y difusión de la información del pueblo venezolano, se sumarán periodistas de todos los medios de comunicación. 
El acto de protesta ha sido convocado para las 12:00 horas. En el se pretende dejar constancia ante la representación diplomática del gobierno de dicho país que toda regimentación es lesiva al derecho de las personas de acceder a los medios por propia voluntad y no por la imposición del poder político.
La Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú rechaza toda posibilidad de un mundo de silenciosos o silenciados.
 

 
OCMA FISCALIZA JUICIO
POR EL CASO RIVERA

La Oficina de Control de la Magistratura (OCMA) inició el lunes 18 de junio, una visita de inspección y control del juicio que efectúa la Sala Penal Superior de Ucayali por el asesinato del periodista Alberto Rivera Fernández, como medida preventiva ante la posible comisión de hechos irregulares en el desarrollo de este proceso.
La inspección, a cargo de un magistrado de la Unidad Operativa Móvil de la OCMA que viajó a Pucallpa, se realiza por orden de la jefa de dicho organismo, Elcira Vásquez Cortez.
"El objetivo de la pesquisa es verificar el cumplimiento de los plazos procesales y el respeto al debido proceso, en el juicio público que se desarrolla contra un grupo de acusados como presuntos autores intelectuales del homicidio del periodista", informó la OCMA.
La OCMA precisó que la intervención del magistrado de la Unidad Operativa Móvil "está circunscrita a la indagación del comportamiento funcional de los magistrados que tienen a su cargo el proceso penal y en el caso de que se hallen irregularidades se adoptarán las medidas de control necesarias, con el conocimiento de la doctora Vásquez".
La Sala Penal de Ucayali tiene a cargo el juzgamiento a los presuntos autores intelectuales del asesinato de Rivera, entre ellos el alcalde Luis Valdez Villacorta y al ex vocal Solio Ramírez Garay, en tanto, los autores materiales ya fueron juzgados y condenados. 
 


ARROJAN PIEDRAS A PERIODISTAS

Los periodistas Doris Cornejo, de Canal N, Jimy Salinas, de América Televisión y Carlos Sanabria, de radio Melodía, denunciaron que fueron agredidos por  un grupo de manifestantes en la ciudad de Arequipa.
En comunicación con la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú (ANP) Salinas informó que a las 14:00 horas del miércoles 20 de junio, cuando cubría información en el paro convocado por el Frente de Defensa de Arequipa, fue golpeado, junto a otros periodistas, por una turba de manifestantes.
"Nos empezaron a lanzar piedras. A mi me impactó una en la pierna, y una botella a la altura del pecho", explicó Salinas, quien indicó que tienen grabadas las imágenes de la agresión. 
Doris Cornejo, periodista de Canal N dijo que tuvieron que esconder la cámara para evitar que la dañaran.
Sostuvo que la manifestación estuvo resguardada sólo por ocho policías, quienes necesitaron de la llegada de otro contingente policial para que les ayudaran a guardar los equipos y ponerlos a salvo.
 


MANIFESTANTES AGREDEN A PERIODISTA

El periodista Francisco Rodríguez Robles, conductor del informativo Sin Fronteras y de la revista Foro del Aire de radio Huaraz Estéreo, en la ciudad de Huaraz, denunció que fue agredido por una turba de manifestantes del Sindicato  Unitario de Trabajadores en la Educación del Perú  (Sutep).
En comunicación con la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú (ANP) Francisco Robles informó que a las 11:00 horas del miércoles 20 de junio, cuando cubría información sobre la marcha de protesta realizada por los integrantes del SUTEP-Huaraz, fue rodeado por un grupo de manifestantes, quienes lo golpearon en el rostro y en otras partes del cuerpo.
"Me rodearon y me comenzaron a golpear en la cara y luego me dieron algunos puntapiés. Tuve que refugiarme de los agresores en una tienda cercana" , explicó Núñez. 
 


ALCALDE QUERELLA A PERIODISTA Y PIDE
UNA REPARACION CIVIL DE 30 MIL SOLES


El periodista Fredy Mamani Quenta director del mensuario Nuevo Vocero Melgarino, en la provincia de Melgar, región de Puno, denunció que ha sido querellado.
En comunicación con la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú (ANP), Fredy Mamani informó que la denuncia la ha  presentado Atilio Huamán Tapara, alcalde del distrito de Nuñoa, provincia de Melgar, por el presunto delito de difamación agravada.
"He sido notificado por el juez mixto de Melgar, Alexander Roque Díaz, para brindar mi declaración, el lunes 18 de junio" , explicó Mamani. 
El periodista informó que ha sido denunciado por informar algunos actos irregulares en su mensuario.
"El alcalde ha solicitado una reparación civil de 30 mil soles (9500 dólares)", explicó el comunicador social.
 


VENEZUELA
SE SUMAN NUEVAS INSTITUCIONES A
PROTESTA CONTRA CIERRE DE RCTV
 
Alejandro Vivas, subsecretario nacional de Copei Partido Popular, en nombre de la organización política que representa, se unió a la convocatoria de la marcha que realizó el pasado lunes la Organización Unidos por la Libertad de Expresión, pautada para el 27 de junio, Día Nacional del Periodista.
"Copei Partido Popular estará presente en la marcha convocada por los periodistas, para apoyarlos en la ardua labor que cumplen día a día y sobre todo en épocas tan criticas, donde la libertad de expresión se encuentra tan amenazada por el Gobierno nacional", dijo Vivas. 
Recordó que ese mismo día se cumple un mes de la salida del aire de Radio Caracas Televisión; de la misma manera anunció que junto a toda la militancia de la tolda verde, acompañaran a los profesionales de la comunicación social para exigir al Ejecutivo nacional "el regreso de RCTV a las pantallas de los televisores de todos los venezolanos".
Asimismo hizo un llamado a los demás partidos políticos y organizaciones de la sociedad civil a que se sumen a la convocatoria de la gran marcha de los periodistas.
 

 
Esta información es responsabilidad del Observatorio Latinoamericano para la Libertad de Expresión de la Federación Latinoamericana de Trabajadores de la Comunicación Social (FELATRACS).
Para mayor información agradeceremos contactarnos vía e-mail: felatracs@felatracs.org
; web: www.felatracs.org o a los teléfonos: (51 1) 4270687, fax (51 1) 4278493

Alerta Perú (PUNO) - ALCALDE QUERELLA A PERIODISTA Y PIDE UNA REPARACIÓN CIVIL DE 30 MIL SOLES

Alerta Perú (PUNO)
 
ALCALDE QUERELLA
A PERIODISTA Y PIDE
UNA REPARACION CIVIL DE 30 MIL SOLES 

El periodista Fredy Mamani Quenta director del mensuario Nuevo Vocero Melgarino, en la provincia de Melgar, región de Puno, denunció que ha sido querellado.

En comunicación con la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú (ANP), Fredy Mamani informó que la denuncia la ha  presentado Atilio Huamán Tapara, alcalde del distrito de Nuñoa, provincia de Melgar, por el presunto delito de difamación agravada.
 
"He sido notificado por el juez mixto de Melgar, Alexander Roque Díaz, para brindar mi declaración, el lunes 18 de junio" , explicó Mamani. 

El periodista informó que ha sido denunciado por informar algunos actos irregulares en su mensuario.
 
"El alcalde ha solicitado una reparación civil de 30 mil soles (9500 dólares)", explicó el comunicador social.
 

 
Esta alerta es responsabilidad de la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú.
 
Para mayor información contactar con Roberto Mejía Alarcón, responsable de la Oficina de los Derechos Humanos del Periodista; Zuliana Lainez y Carlos Juárez Córdova. Jirón Huancavelica 320, oficina 504, Lima-Perú. Tel (511) 4270687. Fax (51 1) 4278493. Web: www.anp.org.pe; E-mail: anp@amauta.rcp.net.pe  

Alerta Perú (HUARAZ) - MANIFESTANTES AGREDEN A PERIODISTA

Alerta Perú (HUARAZ)
 
MANIFESTANTES AGREDEN A PERIODISTA


El periodista Francisco Rodríguez Robles, conductor del informativo Sin Fronteras y de la revista Foro del Aire de radio Huaraz Estéreo, en la ciudad de Huaraz, denunció que fue agredido por una turba de manifestantes del Sindicato  Unitario de Trabajadores en la Educación del Perú  (Sutep).

En comunicación con la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú (ANP) Francisco Robles informó que a las 11:00 horas del miércoles 20 de junio, cuando cubría información sobre la marcha de protesta realizada por los integrantes del SUTEP-Huaraz, fue rodeado por un grupo de manifestantes, quienes lo golpearon en el rostro y en otras partes del cuerpo.
 
"Me rodearon y me comenzaron a golpear en la cara y luego me dieron algunos puntapiés. Tuve que refugiarme de los agresores en una tienda cercana" , explicó Núñez. 

El periodista informó que un día antes de los hechos, había entrevistado a César Saragoza, Secretario General del Sutep, en la ciudad de Huaraz.
 
"He denunciado la agresión ante la comisaría de Huaraz. La policía mediante oficio Nº 690-2007-III-DTP-T-RPA/COM.PNP-HZ-SIDF ha solicitado al médico Legista de la ciudad de Huaraz el reconocimiento médico respectivo", explicó Núñez Borja, quien dijo haber reconocido a uno de los agresores.
 
Informó, asimismo, que solicitará las garantías personales respectivas..
 
ACCIÓN RECOMENDADA
Se solicita remitir apelaciones al titular del Ministerio del Interior, para que de oficio dispongan a quien corresponda la investigación inmediata del hecho, la individualización de responsabilidades y la sanción que prevea la ley a quienes resulten responsables.

Señor
LUIS ALVA CASTRO
Ministerio del Interior
Fax (51 1) 2257234
E-mail: ministro@mininter.gob.pe


Esta alerta es responsabilidad de la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú.

Para mayor información contactar con Roberto Mejía Alarcón, responsable de la Oficina de los Derechos Humanos del Periodista; Zuliana Lainez y Carlos Juárez Córdova. Jirón Huancavelica 320, oficina 504, Lima-Perú. Tel (511) 4270687. Fax (51 1) 4278493. Web: www.anp.org.pe; E-mail: anp@amauta.rcp.net.pe

Alerta Perú (AREQUIPA) - ARROJAN PIEDRAS A PERIODISTAS

Alerta Perú (AREQUIPA)

ARROJAN PIEDRAS A PERIODISTAS


Los periodistas Doris Cornejo, de Canal N, Jimy Salinas, de América Televisión y Carlos Sanabria, de radio Melodía, denunciaron que fueron agredidos por  un grupo de manifestantes en la ciudad de Arequipa.

En comunicación con la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú (ANP) Salinas informó que a las 14:00 horas del miércoles 20 de junio, cuando cubría información en el paro convocado por el Frente de Defensa de Arequipa, fue golpeado, junto a otros periodistas, por una turba de manifestantes.

"Nos empezaron a lanzar piedras. A mi me impactó una en la pierna, y una botella a la altura del pecho", explicó Salinas, quien indicó que tienen grabadas las imágenes de la agresión. 

Doris Cornejo, periodista de Canal N dijo que tuvieron que esconder la cámara para evitar que la dañaran.
 
Sostuvo que la manifestación estuvo resguardada sólo por ocho policías, quienes necesitaron de la llegada de otro contingente policial para que les ayudaran a guardar los equipos y ponerlos a salvo.
 
 ACCIÓN RECOMENDADA
Se solicita remitir apelaciones al titular del Ministerio del Interior, para que de oficio dispongan a quien corresponda la investigación inmediata del hecho, la individualización de responsabilidades, y la sanción que prevea la ley a quienes resulten responsables.

Señor
LUIS ALVA CASTRO
Ministerio del Interior
Fax (51 1) 2257234
E-mail: ministro@mininter.gob.pe
 

 
Esta alerta es responsabilidad de la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú.

Para mayor información contactar con Roberto Mejía Alarcón, responsable de la Oficina de los Derechos Humanos del Periodista; Zuliana Lainez y Carlos Juárez Córdova. Jirón Huancavelica 320, oficina 504, Lima-Perú. Tel (511) 4270687. Fax (51 1) 4278493. Web: www.anp.org.pe; E-mail: anp@amauta.rcp.net.pe

Alerta Perú (PUCALLPA-LIMA) - OCMA FISCALIZA JUICIO POR EL CASO RIVERA

Alerta Perú (PUCALLPA-LIMA)

OCMA FISCALIZA JUICIO
POR EL CASO RIVERA
 
La Oficina de Control de la Magistratura (OCMA) inició el lunes 18 de junio, una visita de inspección y control del juicio que efectúa la Sala Penal Superior de Ucayali por el asesinato del periodista Alberto Rivera Fernández, como medida preventiva ante la posible comisión de hechos irregulares en el desarrollo de este proceso.
 
La inspección, a cargo de un magistrado de la Unidad Operativa Móvil de la OCMA que viajó a Pucallpa, se realiza por orden de la jefa de dicho organismo, Elcira Vásquez Cortez.
 
"El objetivo de la pesquisa es verificar el cumplimiento de los plazos procesales y el respeto al debido proceso, en el juicio público que se desarrolla contra un grupo de acusados como presuntos autores intelectuales del homicidio del periodista", informó la OCMA.

La OCMA precisó que la intervención del magistrado de la Unidad Operativa Móvil "está circunscrita a la indagación del comportamiento funcional de los magistrados que tienen a su cargo el proceso penal y en el caso de que se hallen irregularidades se adoptarán las medidas de control necesarias, con el conocimiento de la doctora Vásquez".

La Sala Penal de Ucayali tiene a cargo el juzgamiento a los presuntos autores intelectuales del asesinato de Rivera, entre ellos el alcalde Luis Valdez Villacorta y al ex vocal Solio Ramírez Garay, en tanto, los autores materiales ya fueron juzgados y condenados.

Rivera, quien conducía el programa Transparencia en radio Frecuencia Oriental de Pucallpa, fue asesinado el 21 de abril del 2004 debido a sus permanentes críticas contra distintas autoridades regionales.
 

 
Esta alerta es responsabilidad de la Asociación Nacional de Periodistas del Perú.

Para mayor información contactar con Roberto Mejía Alarcón, responsable de la Oficina de los Derechos Humanos del Periodista; Zuliana Lainez y Carlos Juárez Córdova. Jirón Huancavelica 320, oficina 504, Lima-Perú. Tel (511) 4270687. Fax (51 1) 4278493. Web: www.anp.org.pe; E-mail: anp@amauta.rcp.net.pe

MEXICO Flash (journalist receives death threats for reporting on government employee's alleged corruption)

MÉXICO: Columnista amenazado de muerte por reportajes sobre presunta
corrupción de funcionario público
MEXICO: Journalist receives death threats for reporting on government
employee's alleged corruption

IFEX - Noticias de la comunidad internacional de la libertad de expresión
________________________________________________________________

ALERTA - MÉXICO

el 20 de junio de 2007

Columnista amenazado de muerte por reportajes sobre presunta corrupción de
funcionario público

FUENTE: Centro de Periodismo y Etica Publica (CEPET), San Miguel de Allende

(CEPET/IFEX) - Lo que sigue es un comunicado de CEPET, un miembro
provisional de IFEX, con fecha del 18 de junio de 2007:

Amenazas de muerte contra columnista

México, 18 de Junio, 2007 - El columnista Francisco Rodríguez informó hoy
que ha sido amenazado de muerte en dos ocasiones en las últimas dos semanas
por el mismo funcionario público. El autor de las amenazas, señaló el
columnista en su colaboración de hoy, es un funcionario del Instituto
Nacional de Estadística (INEGI), Lino Arturo Vera Pérez, quien se desempeña
como coordinador administrativo y quien habría instruido a uno de sus
allegados para que cumpla las amenazas.

Rodríquez es columnista de más de una decena de periódicos tanto de la
Ciudad de México como del interior del país, además de conducir un programa
de noticias en radio que se escucha en 37 emisoras del país. Reside en la
Ciudad de México, y recibió los correos con las amenazas en su búzon
electrónico.

El columnista señaló que después de conocer por primera vez las amenazas,
corroboró con fuentes propias y le fue confirmado que éstas se produjeron y
que el funcionario encargó a un colaborador suyo, Wenceslao Sánchez, a
llevar a cabo las amenazas. Recibió el primer correo amenazador el 2 de
junio de 2007; el periodista escribió en su columna del día 6 de junio,
"Acuso recibo de la amenaza personal y en contra de mi familia, CP Lino
Vera Pérez. Ya sé que el agresor designado es Wenceslao Sánchez, quien sólo
sabe y puede abusar de las mujeres del INEGI. Tomo las providencias del
caso".

En la columna del 18 de junio, el periodista señala, "Yo sueño, como
muchos, morir en mi cama. Así que si, por favor, alguien puede detener
preventivamente a Wenceslao, se lo voy agradecer".

Las amenizas habrían seguido a la publicación de textos del periodista
donde da cuenta de la corrupción y control que mantiene el funcionario
pasando incluso por encima funcionarios de más alto nivel y el uso de
métodos violentos.

El CEPET exhorta a las autoridades a que tomen acciones para investigar los
hechos y para prevenir posibles agresiones a la integridad física del
periodista y su familia.

Para mayor información, comunicarse con Leonarda Reyes, directora de CEPET,
Mesones 14-5, San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, 37700 México, teléf: +52
415 152 3197, fax: +52 415 152 3197, correo electrónico: libex@cepet.org,
cepet@cepet.org, sitio Internet: http://www.cepet.org

Esta información es responsabilidad del CEPET. Favor de reconocer al CEPET
al difundirla.
_____________________________________________________________________
DIFUNDIDO/A POR LA OFICINA DE LA RED IFEX
EL INTERCAMBIO INTERNACIONAL POR LA LIBERTAD DE EXPRESION
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
teléf: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879
correo electrónico: alerts@ifex.org buzón general: ifex@ifex.org
sitio Internet: http://www.ifex.org/
_____________________________________________________________________
IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_____________________________________________________________________

ALERT - MEXICO

20 June 2007

Journalist receives death threats for reporting on government employee's
alleged corruption

SOURCE: Center for Journalism and Public Ethics (CEPET), San Miguel de
Allende

(CEPET/IFEX) - The following is an 18 June 2007 statement from CEPET, an
interim member of IFEX:

Death threats against columnist

Mexico, 18 June 2007 - Columnist Francisco Rodríguez announced today that
he has received two death threats in the last two weeks from the same
public employee. The source of the threats, according to a column Rodríguez
published on 18 June 2007, is Lino Arturo Vera Pérez, an employee of the
National Statistics Institute (Instituto Nacional de Estadística,
INEGI).Vera Pérez is the institute's administrative coordinator. He has
apparently instructed someone close to him to kill Rodríguez.

Rodríguez is a columnist for more than a dozen newspapers throughout the
country, as well as the host of a radio news programme broadcast by 27
different radio stations. He lives in Mexico City, and received the threats
by e-mail.

Rodríguez said that after the first threat, which arrived on 2 June, he
checked with his own sources, who confirmed that the threats were genuine,
and found out that Vera Pérez had put a supporter of his, Wenceslao
Sánchez, in charge of carrying out the threat. In his 6 June column,
Rodríguez wrote, "I acknowledge receiving a threat to me and my family,
from chartered accountant Lino Vera Pérez. I know that the person
designated to perpetrate this act of aggression is Wenceslao Sánchez, who
only knows how to abuse the women working at INEGI, and is in a position to
do so. I am taking appropriate measures to deal with this case."

In his 18 June column, Rodríguez commented, "Like most people, I'd like to
die of old age in my own bed. So, I'd be grateful if someone would put
Wenceslao in preventive custody."

The threats were made following the publication of articles in which
Rodríguez commented on Vera Pérez's corruption and use of violence, as well
as the control he exercises, even over public employees holding positions
of higher rank than he does.

CEPET urges the authorities to investigate these incidents and to prevent
any act of aggression that would endanger the journalist or his family
members.

For further information, contact Leonarda Reyes, Director, at CEPET,
Mesones 14-5, San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, 37700 Mexico, tel: +52 415
152 3197, fax: +52 415 152 3197, e-mail: libex@cepet.org, cepet@cepet.org,
Internet: http://www.cepet.org

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of
CEPET. In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit
CEPET.

_________________________________________________________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
tel: +1 416 515 9622 fax: +1 416 515 7879 alerts e-mail:
alerts@ifex.org
general e-mail: ifex@ifex.org Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/
_________________________________________________________________


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IFEX Autolist - Mali (RSF appeals for release of journalist and teacher imprisoned for insulting president in essay subject)

**We apologise for any cross-posting - The following is being forwarded
exactly as received**

To: IFEX Autolist (other news of interest)
From: Reporters Without Borders (RSF), afrique@rsf.org

La version française suit. The French version follows.

MALI
18 June2007

Journalist and teacher imprisoned for insulting president in essay subject

Reporters Without Borders appealed today to Malian President Amadou Toumani
Touré to intercede to obtain the release of Seydina Oumar Diarra, a
journalist with the privately-owned daily Info-Matin, and Bassirou Kassim
Minta, a literature teacher in a Bamako secondary school, who have been
detained since 14 June on a charge of insulting the president.

The two men were arrested on the state prosecutor's orders because of a 1
June article by Diarra, headlined "Lycée Nanaïssa Santara: the president's
mistress," about a humorous essay subject that Minta gave his final-year
literature students – the story of a "female student and economic
prostitute" who became pregnant by a fictitious president and fought for
her child to be recognised.

"The result of a prosecutor's absurd zeal, these two arrests are worthy of
another age and are clearly an abuse of authority," Reporters Without
Borders said. "The president should show that Malian democracy allows
teachers and journalists to be free with humour and even insolence. Mali's
political stability in recent years has been widely hailed, partly because
press freedom violations had ended and the media had been peacefully
incorporated into the country's democratic development. This case sullies
this image and shows that press freedom is still fragile."

Detained in the capital's main prison, Diarra and Minta are due to appear
before a criminal court on 26 June.


Reporters sans frontières
Communiqué de presse
18 juin 2007

MALI

Un enseignant et un journaliste écroués pour "offense au chef de l'Etat"
après une dissertation sur un président imaginaire

Reporters sans frontières appelle le président malien, Amadou Toumani
Touré, à intervenir pour permettre la libération de Seydina Oumar Diarra et
Bassirou Kassim Minta, respectivement journaliste du quotidien privé
Info-Matin et enseignant dans un lycée de Bamako, incarcérés depuis le 14
juin 2007 pour "offense au chef de l'Etat".

"Conséquence du zèle absurde d'un procureur, cette double incarcération,
digne d'un autre âge, est manifestement abusive. Le président de la
République doit montrer que la démocratie malienne permet aux enseignants
et aux journalistes du pays de manier librement l'humour, voire même
l'insolence. Ces dernières années, le Mali avait connu une stabilité
politique unanimement saluée, notamment parce que les atteintes à la
liberté de la presse avaient cessé et que les médias avaient été intégrés
pacifiquement au développement démocratique. Cette affaire ternit son image
et montre que la liberté de la presse est toujours précaire", a déclaré
l'organisation.

Seydina Oumar Diarra et Bassirou Kassim Minta, professeur de lettres et
censeur du Lycée Nanaïssa Santara, ont été arrêtés par la gendarmerie après
que le procureur de la République s'est autosaisi d'une plainte, suite à la
publication d'un article intitulé "Lycée Nanaïssa Santara : la maîtresse du
président de la République !". Le texte, paru le 1er juin, reprenait et
commentait un sujet de dissertation au ton burlesque donné par l'enseignant
à ses élèves de 10e Lettres, dans lequel une "étudiante, prostituée
économique" tombait enceinte d'un chef d'Etat imaginaire et se battait pour
la reconnaissance de son enfant. Ecroués à la prison centrale de la
capitale, les deux hommes doivent comparaître le 26 juin devant le tribunal
correctionnel de première instance de Bamako 3.

__________________________________________

Leonard VINCENT
Bureau Afrique / Africa desk
Reporters sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
5, rue Geoffroy-Marie
75009 Paris, France
Tel : (33) 1 44 83 84 76
Fax : (33) 1 45 23 11 51
Email : afrique@rsf.org / africa@rsf.org
Web : www.rsf.org

**The information contained in this autolist item is the sole
responsibility of RSF**
**RSF est responsable de toute information contenue dans ce message**


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IFEX autoliste - Mali (l’UJAO exige la libération du journaliste Seydina Oumar Diarra)

To: IFEX autoliste (autres nouvelles d'intérêt)
From: Union des Journalistes de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (UJAO),
wajaujao@yahoo.fr

Sent: Monday, June 18, 2007 6:12 AM

UJAO WAJA

Seydina Oumar Diarra en prison: l'UJAO dénonce et exige sa libération
immédiate

Bamako, 16 juin -Le journaliste malien Seydina Oumar Diarra du quotidien
Info Matin est détenu à la Prison de Bamako depuis le jeudi 14 juin 2007.

M. Diarra a été inculpé par le Procureur pour «Offense au Chef de l'Etat»,
suite à la publication, le 1er juin dernier, sous le titre «La maîtresse du
Président de la République», d'un commentaire et du texte d'un sujet
controversé de dissertation donné à des élèves d'un lycée de Bamako par un
professeur et censeur dans l'établissement. Ce dernier est également en
prison.

Les journalistes et responsables des médias et associations de Presse au
Mali ont souligné le caractère arbitraire de l'arrestation de Seydina
Diarra.

L'Union des Journalistes de l'Afrique de l'Ouest dénonce cette arrestation
et exige la libération immédiate de Seydina Oumar Diarra.

Dans un message aux plus hautes autorités maliennes, le Président de
l'UJAO, Ibrahim Famakan Coulibaly, demande la libération de M. Diarra,
déplorant que «au moment où un mouvement d'ensemble est entrepris pour la
consolidation de la Liberté de la Presse et où des progrès sont notés dans
ce sens en Afrique de l'Ouest, le Mali vienne donner un très mauvais
exemple, par un acte qui constitue un recul grave dans ce pays ».

L'UJAO regroupe les organisations des Journalistes des 16 pays de l'Afrique
de l'Ouest.

Ibrahim Famakan Coulibaly, Président : Tél. (223) 643 28 31 – Courriel:
ibrafam@yahoo.fr
Diatou Cissé Badiane, Secrétaire Générale : Tel (221) 842 01 41 -
Courriel : diatouc@yahoo.ca

Alpha A. SALL, Expert Projet Renforcement Capacités : (221) 633 47 3 –
(223) 305 11 71 - kawalpha@yahoo.fr

Union des Journalistes de l'Afrique de l'Ouest ( UJAO)
17, Boulevard de la République Dakar Sénégal
BP 21 722 Dakar Ponty Sénégal
Tél: ( 221) 842 01 41
Fax: ( 221) 842 02 69
Email: wajaujao@yahoo.fr
Email Président: ibrafam@yahoo.fr
Email SG: diatouc@yahoo.ca

**UJAO est responsable de toute information contenue dans ce message**


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IFEX Autolist - Russia (WAN remembers murdered journalist Anna Politkovskaya as publishing expo opens in Moscow)

**We apologise for any cross-posting - The following is being forwarded
exactly as received**

To: IFEX Autolist (other news of interest)
From: World Association of Newspapers (WAN), lkilman@wan.asso.fr

Sent: Monday, June 18, 2007 6:52 AM

WAN/Russia Publishing Expo

The following is a welcome message by Timothy Balding, CEO of the World
Association of Newspapers, for the catalogue of Publishing Expo 2007, the
annual expo & conference of the Russian publishing industry, which opened
today in Moscow.

The event in the life of the Russian press that has marked me, and the rest
of the international publishing community, in the past year has been
without any doubt the savage murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

Anna who? In the past ten years that I have been a regular visitor to
Russia, a country that I love greatly, this has been the inevitable
question from publishers and editors when I have asked them what they
thought of Anna and her sulfurous reputation as a passionaria of free and
independent journalism in your country, a woman ready to break every taboo
and to write fearlessly about, above all, the misconduct and brutality of
the war in Chechnya.

Anna who? This is no longer a question for anybody in the streets of Paris,
New York or Tokyo - and I hope that I can today say the same about Moscow
or Saint Petersburg, though I'm not sure. But it took her death to make
her a celebrity, where even today there probably isn't a single other
Russian journalist, editor, publisher or media owner whose name means the
slightest thing outside the borders of your country.

Why do I bring up Ms Politkovskaya's tragic murder in the catalogue of a
publishing exhibition and conference that will deal with technology,
advertising, circulation, marketing, distribution and other facets of the
day-to-day operations of a press company?

I'll tell you why. Because the finality of all your efforts to develop a
profitable, commercially-viable newspaper industry in Russia, prospering
from the lifeblood of advertising and selling to the highest possible
number of Russian citizens, is to free your journalists to investigate and
report on all aspects, even the most sombre, of the life of your country,
in full independence and without fear or favour of the powerful lobbies,
whether in politics or business, who dominate public life in your country.
Without your efforts and talent, this will never be possible.

As you listen and learn here at Publishing Expo 2007 how to do your jobs
better and develop and strengthen your publications and their
profitability, I appeal to you not to lose sight of this objective: the
role of the press is, certainly, to entertain and inform; but it's much
more important that that. The press is a fundamental, vital player in
democracy, empowering the citizen to make the right choices by making sure
that he or she is fully aware of what's going on in your country, in
business and in the circles of power, uncovering abuses in every field of
public life and revealing misdoings in the most honest and free manner
possible.

Whether you work in advertising, in marketing, in distribution or in
business development, you are making a vital contribution towards the
realization of these noble objectives and the continuing development of a
modern democracy in Russia. Good luck to all.

Timothy Balding
Chief Executive Officer
World Association of Newspapers

**The information contained in this autolist item is the sole
responsibility of WAN**


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IFEX Autolist - Uzbekistan (Human Rights Watch relieved at release of activist from Andijan)

**We apologise for any cross-posting - The following is being forwarded
exactly as received**

To: IFEX Autolist (other news of interest)
From: Human Rights Watch, hrwpress@hrw.org

Uzbekistan: Activist From Andijan Released on Parole

(New York, June 15, 2007) – A court in Uzbekistan's Andijan province
released human rights defender Gulbahor Turaeva on parole, Human Rights
Watch said today. On June 12, an appeals court commuted her six-year prison
term, handed down by a lower court in April, to a six-year suspended
sentence.

"We are enormously relieved that Gulbahor Turaeva is with her family and
her four children again," said Holly Cartner, Europe and Central Asia
director at Human Rights Watch. "She should never have been jailed in the
first place."

On April 24, Turaeva was tried and convicted on politically motivated
charges of so-called anti-constitutional activities, slander, and producing
and spreading materials that threaten public order. Two weeks later, on May
7, Turaeva was convicted on additional slander charges in a second trial
and sanctioned with a fine in addition to her prison term.

The charges in the first trial were based on allegations that Turaeva had
brought into Uzbekistan a number of books by exiled opposition leader
Muhammed Solih that are unofficially prohibited by the Uzbek authorities.

The Uzbek Ministry of Foreign Affairs information agency (Jahon) published
a statement claiming all the proceedings brought against Turaeva had been
within the law. The statement also included some of Turaeva's testimony to
the appeals court, in which she "confessed" to her "crimes," renounced work
she had done as a human rights defender, and denounced her colleagues.

"The authorities insist that Turaeva's prosecution had no political
motivation, but the references in the statement to her human rights work
and affiliations belie this," said Cartner. "We're more convinced than ever
that she was prosecuted and imprisoned unjustly."

In addition to her suspended sentence and three-year probation period,
Turaeva was ordered to pay a fine of 648,000 som (about US$515). Human
Rights Watch was unable to confirm the terms of Turaeva's probation.

At least 13 other human rights defenders remain in custody in Uzbekistan on
politically motivated charges ranging from "anti-state activities" and
slander to extortion.

"We urge the Uzbek government to free them at once," said Cartner. "And we
call on Uzbekistan's international partners to demand their unconditional
release."

For additional Human Rights Watch reporting on Uzbekistan, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/doc?t=europe&c=uzbeki

For more information, please contact:
In Hamburg, Andrea Berg (English, German, Russian): +49-163-760-9963
(mobile)
In New York, Rachel Denber (English, Russian): +1-212-216-1266

**The information contained in this autolist item is the sole
responsibility of Human Rights Watch**


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IFEX Autolist – Fiji Islands (IFJ slams government’s deportation and blacklisting of New Zealand journalist)

**We apologise for any cross-posting - The following is being forwarded
exactly as received**

To: IFEX Autolist (other news of interest)
From: International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), newsletter@ifj.org

Media Release: Fiji
June 18, 2007

IFJ slams Fijian government's deportation and blacklisting of New Zealand
journalist

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has slammed the Fijian
government for the detainment and deportation of deporting a New Zealand
journalist as an attack on the freedom of the press.

According to local reports, Fairfax journalist Michael Field was detained
on arrival at Suva airport and informed he had been "blacklisted", before
being deported several hours later on June 15.

Field, who arrived in Fiji to cover the diplomatic crisis resulting from
Fiji's decision to expel New Zealand's high commissioner, was reportedly
deported in response the government's unhappiness over critical stories he
had earlier written on the military-imposed Fijian government.

"The blacklisting arrest and deportation of a foreign journalists strikes
at the heart of democracy and a free media," IFJ Asia-Pacific Director
Jacqueline Park said.

According to IFJ New Zealand affiliate, the Engineering, Printing and
Manufacturing Union (EPMU), this was an action clearly calculated to
intimidate and silence voices critical of the regime.

"Intimidation towards foreign and local journalists in Fiji is unacceptable
and raises genuine concerns about the government's commitment to a free
press and democratic society," Park said.

"In promoting democracy in the country, the Fijian government must allow
journalists to move freely, and report without fear or favour."

For further information contact IFJ Asia-Pacific on +61 2 9333 0919
The IFJ represents over 500,000 journalists in more than 115 countries

**The information contained in this autolist item is the sole
responsibility of IFJ**


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CAMBODIA Threat (government's banning of report, threat by governor's brother show lack of commitment to free expression, says Human Rights Watch)

IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
_________________________________________________________________

UPDATE - CAMBODIA

20 June 2007

Government's banning of report, threat by governor's brother show lack of
commitment to free expression, says Human Rights Watch

SOURCE: Human Rights Watch

**Updates IFEX alerts of 15 and 6 June 2007**

(HRW/IFEX) - The following is a 15 June 2007 Human Rights Watch press
release:

Cambodia: Donors Must Hold Government Accountable
Banning of Forest Report Mocks Commitments to Human Rights

(New York, June 15, 2007) - Cambodia's international donors should not
accept any more empty promises from the Cambodian government on human
rights, the rule of law and good governance, Human Rights Watch said today.
The annual Consultative Group meeting of donors is scheduled to take place
in Phnom Penh on June 19-20, and donors are expected to pledge more than
US$600 million in additional aid for the next year.

Human Rights Watch said that the Cambodian government has made virtually no
progress in the past decade on key pledges to donors on the rule of law or
judicial independence. Impunity for human rights violations remains the
rule. Corruption is rampant. Natural resources are still being plundered.
Those who report on such abuses are threatened or harassed and sometimes
subject to violence.

"The $5 billion in aid plowed into Cambodia in the past decade has yielded
little in return for the donors or the Cambodian people," said Brad Adams,
Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "The meeting has become an empty
annual ritual, with the government making and breaking promises every year.
There will be more promises made this year, but without serious donor
pressure they, too, will be broken."

Human Rights Watch called on the Cambodian government to rescind its June 3
order to "ban and collect" the recent report by Global Witness. The report,
"Cambodia's Family Trees," alleges illegal logging by individuals close to
Prime Minister Hun Sen. It also claims that the government's promises to
end illegal logging have been broken, that the army, military police and
police are deeply involved in illegal logging, and that funds from illegal
logging support Hun Sen's personal bodyguard unit, which has been
responsible for human rights abuses.

The government should officially repudiate reported statements by Kompong
Cham provincial governor Hun Neng, Hun Sen's brother. Hun Neng reportedly
said on June 11 that "If they come to Cambodia, I will hit them until
their heads are broken."

"The government's reaction to the Global Witness report shows its lack of
commitment to freedom of expression and public debate, and its continued
thuggish behavior," said Adams. "Donors should insist that the government
undertake a credible judicial investigation into the criminal activities
detailed in the report, rather than resort to violent threats against its
authors. Donors often complain about a lack of political will from the
government, but this will be a test of their political will, too."

Human Rights Watch said that donors have a major role to play in
determining Cambodia's future by continuing their assistance to civil
society and insisting that the government fully comply with commitments
made at successive donor meetings dating back to 1993. After billions of
dollars of donor support over the past 14 years, it is time for a clear and
unambiguous signal to be sent to the government. Donors should make it
clear that they can no longer accept previously unmet promises.

For more than a decade, donors have been providing aid equivalent to
roughly half Cambodia's national budget. As donors have noted, good
governance is directly linked to a country's pace of development. There is
little doubt that Cambodia's development continues to be slowed by the
country's poor governance.

"If donors are serious about development in Cambodia, they should start
generating momentum for real reform," said Adams. "They need to emphasize,
not marginalize, the links between human rights and development."

Development assistance and budgetary support should be contingent on the
government meeting agreed benchmarks on human rights, the rule of law, and
good governance, such as:

- Tackling impunity for human rights abuses, including the many
extrajudicial killings carried out during and after the July 1997 coup by
Hun Sen's government;

- Ceasing to harass and threaten civil society activists and opposition
party members;

- Ensuring that the rights of individuals and organizations to defend and
promote human rights are protected, including the right to peacefully
criticize and protest government policies, in accordance with the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the 1998 United
Nations General Assembly Declaration on Human Rights Defenders;

- Creating an independent and restructured National Election Committee;

- Liberalizing electronic media ownership rules, including allowing
transmitters of private, critical media to be as strong as those of
pro-government private stations;

- Complying fully with previous Consultative Group commitments to address
corruption and misuse of natural resources and other state assets; these
include public disclosure of information concerning management of land,
forests, mineral deposits and fisheries, as well as the location of
military development zones; and,

- Passing legislation on asset disclosure and anti-corruption that meets
international standards, and appointing an independent, international
external auditor for government finances.

Past meetings of the Consultative Group have been attended by 18 countries
and five intergovernmental organizations: Australia, Belgium, Canada,
Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Korea, New Zealand,
Norway, Poland, Russia, Singapore, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the
United States, plus the Asian Development Bank, the European Commission,
the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations Development Program,
and the World Bank.

"The donors' list of conditions hardly changes over time, and the
government simply ignores them year after year," said Adams. "Hun Sen
continues to run circles around the donors, making the same empty promises
every year and laughing all the way to the bank."

For additional Human Rights Watch reporting on Cambodia, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/doc?t=asia&c=cambod

For further information, contact Sophie Richardson, Washington, DC, mobile:
+1 917 721 7473; Brad Adams, London, mobile: +44 79 0872 8333; or Human
Rights Watch, Washington Office, 1522 K Street, N.W., Washington D.C.
20005-1202, U.S.A., tel: +1 202 371 6592, fax: +1 202 371 0124, e-mail:
hrwdc@hrw.org, Internet: http://www.hrw.org/

The information contained in this update is the sole responsibility of
Human Rights Watch. In citing this material for broadcast or publication,
please credit Human Rights Watch.
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