As the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing
came to an official close yesterday, many news outlets are looking at back what
the Games mean for human rights in China. The Canadian Press has a piece arguing that nothing has changed, despite the pleasant face China put on for its
international visitors.
The Ottawa Citizen is running a
story that questions whether the price paid by restricting press freedom was justified
by a the completion of a highly successful Olympics. The News
and Observer in North Carolina looks at the case of Shi Tao, a former CPJ IPFA
winner and journalist still imprisoned in China,
against the backdrop of China's
Olympic triumph. Also, The
Huffington Post has a look at the legacy of the Beijing Olympics.
In news out of Iraq
today, The Associated Press has a story
about Iraq's
top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, inviting the Iraqi press to
his office to quash rumors that he had fallen ill. The cleric has been openly
critical of the press in the past.
Tribune Magazine, published
in the UK, has a detailed
article that examines the dire situation for the press in Mexico. CPJ held a meeting with
Mexican President Felipe Calderon in June in which the president pledged his
support to federalize crimes against freedom of expression.
Leave a comment