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Search Results for: "human rights"

Threat of imminent execution of Ukrainian journalist kidnapped in Syria

December 12, 2012 | Leave a Comment

ARTICLE 19, Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the International Press Institute and Reporters Without Borders are deeply concerned that Ukrainian journalist Anhar Kochneva, kidnapped by Syrian rebels in October 2012, is in grave danger of being murdered. Her kidnappers, allegedly members of the Free Syrian Army, have threatened to kill her tomorrow, 13 December 2012, […]

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Syrian Journalists Association: 100 media activists & journalists killed in Syrian conflict

December 3, 2012 Naomi Hunt | Leave a Comment

The media freedom committee of the Syrian Journalists Association, with whom the International Press Institute (IPI) has cooperated in its efforts to verify information related to attacks against journalists in Syria, announced that 100 media activists, citizen reporters and journalists have been killed in Syria since the start of the conflict last year. Thirty-six journalists […]

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Egypt set to enshrine press freedom confusion in new Constitution

November 30, 2012 Naomi Hunt | Leave a Comment

The 234 articles of Egypt’s new draft constitution have been approved by the country’s constituent assembly, and the charter will now be voted on by the public in a referendum. Proponents have hailed the arrival of a constitution they say enshrines the values of the revolution, but when it comes to journalists’ rights, observers fear […]

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Turkish journalist freed after 3 years in prison

November 29, 2012 Steven M. Ellis | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today welcomed news that journalist and publisher Bedri Adanir, who had been imprisoned in Turkey for nearly three years, has been released. A court in Diyarbakir on Tuesday ordered Adanir, owner of Aram Publishing and a writer for Kurdish daily newspaper Hawar, freed after convicting him of aiding a terrorist […]

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Journalists under attack – a call for action to improve journalists’ safety

November 23, 2012 Michael Spindelegger, Vice-Chancellor & Foreign Minister of the Republic of Austria and Alison Bethel McKenzie, Executive Director, The International Press Institute (IPI) | Leave a Comment

  Well over 100 journalists have been killed so far this year – the highest number since the International Press Institute (IPI) began keeping count of journalists’ deaths in 1997. All across the world – from Africa, Asia and Europe, to the Middle East and Latin America – journalists continue to be systematically and brutally […]

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IPI urges Bahamas to repeal criminal defamation

November 21, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) last week sent a letter to Bahamian Prime Minister Perry Christie urging the newly re-elected leader to decriminalise defamation offences and thereby bring the nation’s press-related laws in line with international standards. Under the Bahamian Penal Code, individuals convicted of intentional libel face up to two years in prison. Seditious […]

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Palestinian journalist prosecuted, TV channel seeks justice following Israeli raid

November 12, 2012 Nadia Danecek, Naomi Hunt | Leave a Comment

Political commentator Jihad Harb could be prosecuted by the Palestinian Authority for a piece published on a news website, while Palestinian broadcaster Watan TV has turned to the Israeli High Court for justice months after a raid by the Israeli Defense Forces, in which the station’s broadcasting equipment and documents were confiscated. Jihad Harb Jihad […]

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SEEMO observes deterioration of press freedom in Greece

November 12, 2012 SEEMO Staff | Leave a Comment

The Vienna-based South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO), an affiliate of the International Press Institute (IPI), said today that it has registered an increase in attacks and pressure on Greek journalists. “Greek police and courts appear to be slow when investigating and condemning attacks against journalists and extremely fast when detaining media representatives,” SEEMO Secretary […]

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Wave of journalist arrests in Cuba

November 12, 2012 Scott Griffen | Leave a Comment

International Press Institute (IPI) World Press Freedom Hero Yoani Sánchez and prominent opposition journalist and attorney Yaremis Flores were among at least 27 Cuban dissidents arrested last week during what observers have called a new “wave of repression” on the Caribbean island. Flores was among a group of independent lawyers detained by authorities last Wednesday. […]

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Press freedom advocate publishes English language report on the ‘Fences of Silence’ in Sudan

November 8, 2012 Naomi Hunt | Leave a Comment

If the flow of information and ideas in Sudan is ever to be free, Khartoum will need to change the way it treats journalists and the media, according to a new report by Sudanese journalist and press freedom advocate Abdelgadir Mohammed Abdelgadir. His research, which documents violations of press freedom and freedom of expression that […]

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IPI Board congratules Grenada on decriminalising defamation

November 6, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The Executive Board of the International Press Institute (IPI) congratulated Grenadian Prime Minister Tillman Thomas on his government’s partial decriminalisation of defamation in a letter sent last week. Writing on behalf of the other 27 board members, IPI Board Chair and Head of the Foundation for Investigative Journalism – Foundation 19/29 (Russia) Galina Sidorova said […]

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Groups criticize EU’s silence on case against Greek journalist

November 2, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) and its affiliate, the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO), have joined international freedom of expression groups in criticising the European Union’s silence on Greek prosecutors’ decision to appeal the acquittal of a journalist who published a list of names of some 2,000 Greeks who allegedly hold bank accounts in […]

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Another journalist killed in Pakistan’s Balochistan province

October 25, 2012 | Leave a Comment

On Oct. 23, unknown assailants gunned down Pakistani journalist Khalid Musa Mengal, a reporter with the daily newspaper Ummat in Turbat, Balochistan province, the Rural Media Network Pakistan (RMNP) reported. Condemning the murder as a „barbaric act“, RMNP noted that most attacks against journalists are never investigated and go unpunished. Balochistan is the most dangerous […]

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2012 deadliest year for journalists

October 23, 2012 IPI Staff | Leave a Comment

This year of continuing change in the world of news media has also been marked by an appalling and disturbing truth: an unprecedented 133 journalists were killed in the line of duty or as a consequence of their reporting in 2012. This year’s figure is the highest since the International Press Institute (IPI) started systematically […]

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IPI Special Report: Criminal defamation laws remain widespread in the Caribbean

October 15, 2012 Scott Griffen | Leave a Comment

Where in the Caribbean can journalists be sent to prison for doing their job? The answer: Everywhere. A comprehensive legal review conducted by the International Press Institute (IPI) confirmed that every independent state considered geographically or culturally part of the Caribbean maintains some form of criminal defamation that could result in imprisonment.   Of those 16 […]

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IPI expresses concern over proposed changes to Italian defamation law

October 12, 2012 Nadia Danecek | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today expressed concern over proposed amendments to Italy’s defamation law, the latest of which includes imprisonment as a possible penalty for criminal libel. Parliament has been considering changes to Italian defamation law since Italy’s highest tribunal last month upheld Il Giornale editor Alessandro Sallusti’s conviction and 14-month prison sentence for […]

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IPI joins international groups in letter to Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn

October 9, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) joined nearly thirty organisations in writing to Ethiopia’s new Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, to ask that his government prioritise human rights reforms, particularly with respect to press freedom and journalism. Over the last year, five journalists were detained and later sentenced to years in prison for “terrorism”, while several others […]

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Italian president weighs in on editor’s conviction in criminal libel case

September 28, 2012 Steven M. Ellis | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today criticised an Italian court’s decision upholding an editor’s 14-month prison sentence for criminal libel, but the press freedom group expressed hope that the decision could lead to long-overdue reforms of Italian defamation law. A statement posted on Italian President Giorgio Napolitano’s website yesterday said that he and Justice Minister […]

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IPI kicks off Oil, Gas & Media Conference

September 18, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today kicked off its two-day “Oil, Gas and Media Conference” by calling on the Azerbaijan government to support a free media and to promote greater transparency in the oil and gas sector. More than 170 journalists from 27 countries gathered at Gulustan Palace to open the first-of-its-kind event, which began […]

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International groups express alarm over deteriorating media freedom in Turkey

September 17, 2012 Steven M. Ellis | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute today joined with its Turkish National Committee, the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ), EFJ affiliate the Journalists’ Union of Turkey (Türkiye Gazeteciler Sendikası – TGS) and the Freedom for Journalists Platform (Gazetecilere Özgürlük Platformu – GÖP) to issue a statement expressing alarm over the continuing deterioration of media freedom in Turkey. […]

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As Cairo undergoes democratic transition, media remains at center of struggle for control

September 12, 2012 Fatma Elshhati | Leave a Comment

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi’s Freedom and Justice Party said, as part of its party platform, that it would uphold freedom of the press through the “elimination of government-controlled press institutions.” It also guaranteed that press laws would be amended and the Information Ministry would be abolished along with the statutory Supreme Press Council, whose powers […]

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IPI welcomes announced pardon of Swedish journalists in Ethiopia

September 10, 2012 Naomi Hunt | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute welcomed early reports that two Swedish journalists who have spent more than a year in an Ethiopian prison are to be pardoned, according to news reports. Freelancer Martin Schibbye and photojournalist Johan Persson were arrested in July 2011 while travelling with rebels in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia, where separatist insurgents […]

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OP-ED: Criminal defamation laws in the Caribbean are ripe for repeal

September 7, 2012 Alison Bethel McKenzie | Leave a Comment

Early this year, Dominican journalist Johnny Alberto Salazar was sentenced to six months in jail for slander and libel. The charges stemmed from Salazar’s on-air comments accusing Pedro Baldera, a local Human Rights Committee official, of “protecting delinquents and people linked to organised crime.” Salazar, an elected council member and well-known local gadfly, said prior […]

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Colombian Supreme Court withdraws defamation charges against two columnists

August 28, 2012 Scott Griffen | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today welcomed the announcement by Colombia’s Supreme Court that it would not pursue criminal defamation charges against two journalists who had written opinion columns critical of the Court. In a statement released yesterday, the Court reiterated its rejection of the criticism contained in the columns, but said “for the sake […]

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Charges dropped against critical Ethiopian editor

August 28, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) on Tuesday welcomed the news that charges against Ethiopian editor Temesgen Desalegn have been withdrawn, and called for Ethiopia to reform its stance toward the media and free all journalists who are currently in jail for their criticism of official policies, and cease its harassment of Feteh newspaper. Prosecutors sent […]

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Egypt’s President Morsi issues law against media detention

August 24, 2012 Fatma Elshhati | Leave a Comment

In his first legislative move as president, Egypt’s Mohamed Morsi passed a law on Thursday banning the pre-trial detention of journalists accused of “publishing offences”. The move came hours after a Giza criminal court decided to place Islam Afifi, chief-editor of Al Dustour newspaper, in preventative custody. Afifi was held last week on charges of […]

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IPI calls for immediate release of Turkish cameraman held in Syria

August 24, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today reiterated its call for the immediate release of Turkish journalist Cüneyt Ünal, who was reportedly captured by Syrian loyalist forces on Aug. 20. Ünal, a cameraman with the US-funded Arabic-language satellite station Al Hurra, was reportedly travelling near Aleppo alongside Japanese reporter, Mika Yamamoto, who was killed on Aug. […]

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GUEST BLOG ENTRY: The Media Cold War

August 23, 2012 Anne-Marie Slaughter | Leave a Comment

An information war has erupted around the world. The battle lines are drawn between those governments that regard the free flow of information, and the ability to access it, as a matter of fundamental human rights, and those that regard official control of information as a fundamental sovereign prerogative. The contest is being waged institutionally […]

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Egypt prosecutes journalists for ‘insulting’ and ‘inciting murder against’ President Morsi

August 16, 2012 Naomi Hunt | Leave a Comment

Egypt will prosecute two journalists for their criticism of newly-elected President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, according to news reports. Tawfiq Okasha, owner of Al Faraeen TV station, is to be tried for “incitement to murder” of the president, while Islam Afifi, chief editor of Al Dustour newspaper, is charged with publishing “false information” […]

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Gambia closes Teranga FM for the second time

August 16, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The Gambian authorities have closed Teranga FM for the second time after warning the radio station to stop a program that translated reports from local newspapers into local languages. The International Press Institute (IPI) expressed its dismay at the news, and called on the authorities to recognise citizens’ right under the Universal Declaration of Human […]

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Syrian free speech advocate to be tried in secret

August 10, 2012 Gunes Yildiz | Leave a Comment

Syria’s Air Force Intelligence has decided to try Syrian human rights lawyer Mazen Darwish, head of the Damascus-based Syrian Centre for Media and Freedom of Expression (SCM), behind closed doors before a Military Field Court, Reuters reported yesterday. The news agency said that the Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) expressed concern that Darwish might […]

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Kazakh journalist hospitalised after attack

August 9, 2012 Steven M. Ellis | Leave a Comment

The International Press Institute (IPI) today called on authorities in Kazakhstan to investigate an attack that reportedly left a journalist in the capital city of Astana hospitalised with severe injuries. Unknown assailants beat Ularbek Baitailaq– a Kazakh National Archive employee, who has contributed articles to the opposition Dat weekly, the Chetvyortaya vlast (Fourth Estate) newspaper […]

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GUEST BLOG: Imprisoned Turkish journalist Soner Yalçın

July 30, 2012 Soner Yalçın | Leave a Comment

SILIVRI, Turkey, July 30, 2012 – YOU ARE MY PARTNER IN CRIME “Is there anybody out there?” Every now and then, in my prison cell, where there is a water shortage for 17 hours, the lights are on for 24 hours, and where I am being monitored by two different cameras at all times, I find […]

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