Relying heavily on vague antistate charges, authorities jail 145 journalists worldwide. Eritrea, Burma, and Uzbekistan are also among the worst jailers of the press. A CPJ special report

Relying heavily on vague antistate charges, authorities jail 145 journalists worldwide. Eritrea, Burma, and Uzbekistan are also among the worst jailers of the press. A CPJ special report
New York, February 10,
2010—The Committee to Protect Journalists is relieved that the U.S military has
released Iraqi photographer and cameraman Ibrahim Jassam today after
holding him without charge for 17 months in Jassam, left, a freelancer who worked for Reuters, was arrested on
September 2, 2008, by U.S and Iraqi forces during a raid on his home in
Mahmoodiya, south of

Did you miss it? Yesterday was the 61st anniversary of the United Nation General Assembly’s adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. President Barack Obama, as he was leaving for
As of December 1, 2009 | » Read the accompanying report: "FREELANCERS UNDER FIRE"

Yesterday, CPJ received the Thomas J. Dodd Prize
for International Justice and Human Rights at an outdoor ceremony at the
CPJ called on U.S. military forces to charge or release journalist Ibrahim Jassam, who has been imprisoned in Iraq for one year as of today. Jassam, a freelance cameraman and photographer working for Reuters, has not been charged with a crime, and no evidence against him has ever been disclosed. U.S. forces have made only vague assertions that he is a "threat." Our statement follows: