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Holbrooke with his wife, the author Kati Marton, at CPJ's International Press Freedom Awards in November. (Getty Images for CPJ/Michael Nagle)

CPJ mourns the passing of Richard Holbrooke

Richard C. Holbrooke, “one of the giants of American foreign policy” in President Barack Obama’s words, was also an ally of press freedom and a good friend to CPJ. In a statement marking Holbrooke’s death at age 69, Chairman Paul E. Steiger said: “CPJ mourns the passing of Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke. He was a…

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CPJ’s Smyth in Harvard Review: Facing impunity is key

Harvard International Review ran a feature article called “Murdering With Impunity: The Rise in Terror Tactics Against News Reporters,” by CPJ’s Journalist Security Coordinator Frank Smyth in its Fall 2010 issue, billed as a symposium focused on changes in journalism and press freedom. Editors-in-Chief Collin Galster and Gloria Park write in the printed issue’s foreword: 

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Laura Linney and Brian D'Arcy James play  journalists pulled apart by their wartime experiences in "Time Stands Still." (Joan Marcus)

A reporter’s war through the lens of Broadway

It takes a certain kind of person to cover a war up close and personal, day after day. One such journalist is Sarah Goodwin, the photographer in “Time Stands Still” by playwright Donald Margulies.

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Obiang prize suspended indefinitely

The Obiang prize, named for and funded by one of Africa’s most notorious dictators, was a very poor idea from the start and our goal, bluntly, was to kill it. We didn’t quite succeed in getting an outright cancellation, but the prize, while technically alive, is in a deep coma with virtually no chance of…

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Asia program now on Facebook, Twitter

Until now, CPJ’s Asia program has relied largely on email blasts to get the word out when we post something new on CPJ.org. Today we launched our Facebook and Twitter pages. Like us and follow us for an inside look at the Asia program and quick, timely updates on our alerts and blogs. We also…

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Russian journalists detail FSB and ‘New Nobility’

How do you crack Russia’s vaunted security service? You go to low- and mid-level officials for information, say Russian journalists Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan, authors of the new book, The New Nobility: The Restoration of Russia’s Security State and the Enduring Legacy of the KGB. At a luncheon for CPJ supporters on Thursday, Soldatov…

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CPJ en Español is now on Facebook

We’re pleased to launch CPJ’s official Facebook page in Spanish, CPJ en Español. We hope to engage our followers throughout Latin America in an ongoing conversation about press freedom challenges in the region.

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What’s new on the CPJ Blog

You may have noticed a few changes we’ve made to the CPJ Blog recently. Here’s what’s new (with much thanks to our Web developer, John Emerson): Our bylines are now clickable. You can see a staffer’s (or guest blogger’s) entries on one page by clicking, giving you an overview of blogs written by, say, Bob Dietz,…

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CPJ Impact

News from the Committee to Protect Journalists, August 2010 Honduras report citing official failures draws a responseIn a few short months, seven journalists were gunned down in Honduras. While the country has been beset by crime and political turmoil, it had not been known as a particularly dangerous place for the press. Is someone targeting…

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CPJ, partner groups urge UNESCO to pull Obiang prize

New York, August 12, 2010–The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization should cancel the Obiang prize at its next session in October 2010, the Committee to Protect Journalists and 95 partner groups said in a letter to UNESCO Executive Board members today.

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