CPJ Update
October 17, 2005 News from the Committee to Protect Journalists |
International Press Freedom Awardees named We’re proud to honor four people who have defended press freedom with courage and distinction with our 15th Annual International Press Freedom Awards. The awards will be presented at a ceremony at Manhattan’s Waldorf-Astoria on Tuesday, November 22. Our awardees include journalists from Brazil and Uzbekistan, an imprisoned writer from China, and a prominent press lawyer from Zimbabwe. We’ll also pay tribute to our late colleague Peter Jennings, whoseextraordinary career is beingrecognized with our 2005 Burton Benjamin Memorial Award for lifetime achievement. Our award winners are: Galima Bukharbaeva, of Uzbekistan, a former correspondent for the Institute for War & Peace Reporting, who angered authorities and risked her life covering government repression; Beatrice Mtetwa, a Zimbabwean lawyer,who has been arrested, beaten and harassed for defending the press; Lúcio Flávio Pinto, of Brazil, a publisher and editor who reports on drug trafficking, environmental issues, and corruption in the Amazon; and Shi Tao, of China, a newspaper editor and freelance journalist for Internet publications, whose writing led to a 10-year prison sentence. To read more about our awardees: http://www.cpj.org/awards05/awards_release_05.html
CBS Chairman Leslie Moonves is chairman of the awards dinner. Chicago Tribune columnist Clarence Page, a CPJ board member, will be our host. For more information about the benefit, call Bill Butler or Maria D’Amato at 212-573-6933. Chad diplomat pledges attention to violations Clarence Page, CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Julia Crawford, and CPJ Washington representative Frank Smyth expressed our concerns in an October 3 meeting in Washington, D.C. We urged Chadian officials to repeal the criminal charge of “defaming the president,” which has been used to jail several journalists in recent months. We also called for safeguards to ensure that laws criminalizing “incitement” not be misused to suppress critical reporting and commentary. To read our news alert: http://www.cpj.org/news/2005/Chad03oct05na.html Warner urges Pentagon to address press problems in Iraq Journalist security “is an issue that we take very seriously,” Gen. George Casey, U.S. commander in Iraq, told the committee. Warner told reporters after the hearing that he discussed the issues with Rumsfeld and “he’s going to take it under immediate consideration.” CPJ and other press groups have sent a follow-up letter to the Pentagon seeking a date for discussions. We’re waiting for a response. To read our September 28 letter to Rumsfeld: http://www.cpj.org/protests/05ltrs/Iraq28sept05pl.html To read our analysis on the military’s investigative failures: http://www.cpj.org/news/2005/iraq14sept05na.html To read a letter from CPJ and Human Rights Watch on checkpoint dangers: http://www.cpj.org/protests/05ltrs/Checkpoint_Rumsfeld.html CPJ urges caution amid China enthusiasm Wright, our Asia program coordinator, was on a panel discussing China’s growing presence in Latin America. She pointed out the ethical problems that arise when news and communications companies do business with authoritarian governments that do not uphold international human rights standards within their countries. Wright highlighted the complicity of Internet giant Yahoo in providing Chinese authorities with information that led to the jailing of writer Shi Tao for 10 years. Speaking at Washington’s American University on September 30, Simon said that governments improperly label critical reporting as “incitement to rebellion” or “incitement to hatred,” and then “either summarily shut down the offending media outlet or take legal action against the journalists.” CPJ research has found 46 such cases since 2002. Among those taking part in the conference were Aryeh Neier, president of the Open Society Institute, and Luis Moreno-Ocampo, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. |