In the News

  

Mexico needs legislation to ensure press freedom

Joel Simon and Carlos Lauria Published in San Antonio Express-News July 20, 2007 http://www.mysanantonio.com/opinion/stories/MYSA072107.02O.CPJcomment.23e2b59.html The recent decision by the San Antonio Express-News to temporarily remove its border correspondent from its Laredo bureau was a judicious move. The paper temporarily withdrew reporter Mariano Castillo after a U.S. law enforcement source warned that an unspecified American journalist…

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The Toxic Toll of Press Repression

Kristin Jones Published in The Wall Street Journal Asia July 9, 2007 The discovery of toxic ingredients in toothpaste, seafood, cough syrup and toys has raised questions about the safety of China’s exports. These threats — and the risk they pose to consumers — could have been uncovered much earlier had the Chinese government used…

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The world can’t sit idle as journalists are murdered

Terry Anderson USA Today June 25, 2007 A Mighty Heart is the story of the deliberate, horrifying execution of Daniel Pearl, a top Wall Street Journal reporter, by Islamic extremists in Pakistan in 2002. Starkly and dramatically filmed in the chaotic streets where Pearl worked and was kidnapped, the film — which opened nationwide over…

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Killing the Russian Media

EDITORIAL The New York Times May 24, 2007 Journalists from around the world who will gather in Moscow next week are poised to stand up for their colleagues in a country where journalism and journalists are increasingly under attack. The 1,000 media representatives plan to establish a commission to finally investigate the growing number of…

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Held without charges; 2 cases of journalists in U.S. military custody raise questions

By Clarence Page Chicago Tribune May 13, 2007 WASHINGTON – Has journalism become a crime in the Bush administration’s “war on terror”? We Americans are left to wonder. Our military is holding two journalists without charges or any public evidence that they broke any laws.

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Dying to tell

Robert Mahoney The Guardian online May 3, 2007 http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/robert_mahoney/2007/05/dying_to_tell.html The appalling reality of journalism today in many countries is that a notebook or a camera can be a death sentence. In the past 15 years more than 600 reporters, editors, columnists, photojournalists and media support staff have been killed for their work, according to research…

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Time for Journalists to Defend Press Freedom

Samar Fatany Arab News February 21, 2007 I was reading an online discussion between early board members and former directors of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) regarding the challenges facing the press today. One of the best comments I read was an extract by Ann Cooper, executive director of the committee, in which she…

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Elected autocrats a danger to press-rights group

Michelle Nichols Reuters News February 5, 2007 NEW YORK, Feb 4 (Reuters) – The rise of popularly elected “democratators” in Venezuela and Russia is an alarming new model for government control of the press, the U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists warned on Sunday.

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Pakistan’s Silenced Press

Bob Dietz Published in Wall Street Journal Asia January 8, 2007 As the Taliban embed themselves deeper into Pakistan’s restive provinces along the border with Afghanistan, journalists covering the region are coming under attack and driven away from a story with global consequences for the U.S.-led coalition fighting militant Islamists.

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Empty promise of press freedom

Bob Dietz Published in the South China Morning Post December 12, 2006 China media-watchers are accustomed to seeing moderate pendulum swings in the government’s approach to press freedom. Over the years, rules have been eased, only to be reined back when social conditions or political administrations change.

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