Attacks on the Press

  

Attacks on the Press 1999: Costa Rica

Legal and political wrangling shook Costa Rica’s media and threatened to undercut the country’s normally vibrant and independent press. In a June 25 decision, the Costa Rican Supreme Court upheld a libel verdict against three journalists from La Nación, Costa Rica’s leading daily. The case stemmed from a 1997 article reporting that the National Association…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Cuba

President Fidel Castro Ruz’s government did its best to stamp out independent journalism in Cuba this year, promulgating a bill that virtually outlaws free expression and perfecting preemptive repression. The Cuban constitution grants the Communist Party the right to control the press; it recognizes “freedom of speech and the press in accordance with the goals…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Democratic Republic of Congo

The civil war that began as a rebel insurgency in August 1998 continued to destabilize the entire region, with Angola, Zimbabwe, and Namibia supporting President Laurent-Désiré Kabila’s government and Rwanda and Uganda fighting on the side of Congolese rebel forces. From the beginning, President Kabila has tended to blame his military setbacks on the local…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Djibouti

On April 16, Ismael Omar Guelleh, lifelong protégé of retiring president Hassan Gouled Aptidon (who had ruled this small Horn of Africa nation since its independence from France in 1977) was elected head of state amid allegations of massive fraud. Shortly after the election, disagreements between the majority Issa ethnic group, which dominates the state…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Dominican Republic

Dominican journalists reported very few restrictions on press freedom last year. However, two major developments raised concern among the local press. In September, the electoral board passed a resolution imposing restrictions on campaign advertising for the May 2000 presidential elections. The resolution requires news organizations to accept price controls for advertising and denied them the…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: East Timor

In August, as East Timor prepared to vote on whether to declare independence from Indonesia, military-backed, pro-Indonesia militias threatened, harassed and physically assaulted journalists covering the disputed territory. The attacks began shortly after the announcement in March of a United Nations-brokered agreement to hold an August 30 referendum on the independence issue. The Indonesian military…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Ecuador

During the worst economic crisis in Ecuadoran history, local journalists reported no major restrictions on their ability to cover the news, although defamation continues to be a crime punishable by up to three years in prison. On April 30, Congress lifted the value-added tax exemption on the distribution of newspapers, reportedly because of the economy’s…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: El Salvador

While access to information remained the primary concern for journalists in El Salvador, new legal restrictions provoked loud protests. And a series of violent threats against journalists suggested continuing intolerance for a press that has grown more assertive in recent years. (See the special report on postwar journalism in El Salvador and Guatemala.) President Francisco…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Eritrea

Since Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in 1991, neither the concept of press freedom nor the reality of a free press has made much headway, according to Eritrean journalists. Local media continued to be dominated by jingoistic coverage of the ongoing war with Ethiopia, which broke out in May 1998. Eritrea has one state newspaper…

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Attacks on the Press 1999: Ethiopia

In past years, Ethiopia has had one of the worst records for imprisoning journalists in Africa. At one point in 1998, about two dozen journalists were in prison, many for criticizing the government’s close relationship with Eritrea. But that number dropped by about half after the war between Ethiopia and Eritrea erupted in May 1998.…

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