IFEX Communiqué Vol 20, No 06
Vol. 20 No. 06 | 9 February 2011
Headlines
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Egypt:
Record number of IFEX members call for
Mubarak to respect free expression as attacks on media
continue
Middle East and North Africa / Africa: Governments stamp out Egypt solidarity protests
Rwanda: Women journalists get 17, seven years in jail
Belarus: Heavy restrictions for released journalists
Colombia: Threatening pamphlets target media
Asia and Pacific: Violence against media widespread in Southeast Asian "democracies", says SEAPA report
Free Expression Spotlight
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EGYPT: RECORD NUMBER OF IFEX MEMBERS CALL FOR
MUBARAK TO RESPECT FREE EXPRESSION AS ATTACKS ON MEDIA
CONTINUE
A journalist who was shot by a sniper
while filming protests in downtown Cairo died last week,
becoming the first journalist killed in the recent unrest in
Egypt. While police, supporters of President Hosni Mubarak
and even the military violently attack eyewitnesses and
journalists reporting on the streets, IFEX members are standing with their
counterparts in Egypt and a record 55 of them joined
other groups in calling on the Egyptian government to
respect and protect freedom of expression and the right to
information. Read more>>
Regional news
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MIDDLE
EAST AND NORTH AFRICA / AFRICA: GOVERNMENTS STAMP OUT EGYPT SOLIDARITY
PROTESTS
Security forces are violently putting
down protests that have flared up across the Arab world
inspired by or in solidarity with Egypt's uprising, report
Human Rights Watch and IFEX members in the region. Read more>>
RWANDA: WOMEN JOURNALISTS GET 17, SEVEN YEARS IN
JAIL
They weren't the ridiculously long sentences
that prosecutors were looking for, but last week two women
journalists in Rwanda were sentenced to 17 years and seven
years respectively for inciting disobedience, causing
divisions and denying the 1994 genocide, report the
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and Reporters Without
Borders (RSF). Read more>>
BELARUS: HEAVY RESTRICTIONS FOR RELEASED
JOURNALISTS
The Belarusian security service (KGB)
has released women journalists Natalya Radina and Irina
Khalip, but has upheld criminal charges against them and has
severely restricted their activities, report the Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and the Writers in Prison
Committee of PEN International (WiPC). Read more>>
COLOMBIA: THREATENING PAMPHLETS TARGET
MEDIA
"Keep supporting the leftist dogs and you
will be dead; get out of the city." So reads a pamphlet
anonymously left at a radio station in Barrancabermeja,
Colombia, in what the Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa
(FLIP) terms is a new method of intimidating the press. Read more>>
Also in this issue
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ASIA AND
PACIFIC: VIOLENCE AGAINST MEDIA WIDESPREAD IN
SOUTHEAST ASIAN "DEMOCRACIES", SAYS SEAPA
REPORT
Impunity, censorship and violence against
journalists were rampant in the so-called established
"democracies" of Southeast Asia in 2010, says "Caught in the
Crossfire", a new report by the Southeast Asian Press
Association (SEAPA). This trend will most likely continue
into 2011, adds SEAPA. Read more>>
ENDS