DW-AKADEMIE | Commentary on the EU’s new development policy

The European Union (EU) aims to redefine its development policy by the end of 2011. DW-AKADEMIE is actively following this process and has initiated a commentary on media and development.

Effectively and economically supporting developing countries so that they can sustainably improve people’s living conditions – this is to be the goal of Europe’s future development policy. A DW-AKADEMIE commentary regarding the EU’s Green Paper on development policy states the role the media can play in this process. DW-AKADEMIE’s contribution to the debate has been signed by other European media development institutions including the BBC World Service Trust, the International Institute for Journalism (IIJ), the Swedish Fojo Media Institute and the Radio Netherlands Training Centre (RNTC). With its Green Paper on development policy, the EU has initiated a consultation process at the European level. Involved in the debate are stakeholders from the fields of politics and civil society.

“Free and independent media have a positive effect on many areas and can support development processes as well as critically accompany them,” says Patrick Leusch, head of DW-AKADEMIE’s Project Development division and author of the commentary. “The future direction of EU development policy focuses on economic growth that creates jobs; on the effective use of funds; on the rule of law and good governance. In all these areas free and independent media are the most important social control factor.” That’s why, says Leusch, media development must be part of a sustainable European development policy.

The DW-AKADEMIE commentary on media and sustainable development will now be published by the EU and become part of the on-going discussion. A White Paper on the new strategic focus of EU development policy is to be released at the end of 2011. DW-AKADEMIE will continue to actively follow its formation.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,6432814,00.html?maca=en-newsletter_en_DW-AKADEMIE-4842-html-nl

Learn photojournalism in 5-day boot camp [Prague]

Date:01/08/11 — 06/08/11
Deadline:31/03/11
Transitions Online
Cost:1,125.00 USD
Location:PragueCzech RepublicJournalists and students interested in photojournalism can attend a course in Prague.

The Photojournalism Course, offered by Transitions Online, aims to provide an introduction to taking, editing and selling photographs. It will focus on both classroom training sessions and practical shooting and editing sessions. Sample topics include lighting, post-production and multimedia presentations.

The course will be led by Dean Cox, a freelance photojournalist who has sold his work to the Associated Press, the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, EurasiaNet and Bloomberg News.

Students are required to bring their own cameras, but organizers say «it doesn’t matter if it’s the cheapest camera on the market or a top-of-the range Canon or Nikon.» The course will be conducted in English. The course fee includes accommodation, but not travel costs.

Apply by March 31, 2011 for an early-bird discount, ?845 (US$1,125).

For more information: http://www.tol.org/client/training/course/21735-photojournalism-august-2011.html

http://www.tol.org/client/training/course/21735-photojournalism-august-2011.html

Foreign correspondent course offered [Prague]

Date:24/07/11 — 01/08/11
Deadline:31/03/11
Transitions Online
Cost:1,395.00 USD
Location:PragueCzech RepublicJournalists and students interested in international reporting can attend a course in Prague.

The Foreign Correspondent Training Course, offered by Transitions Online, aims to provide an introduction to international reporting, through training by respected foreign correspondents and a practical reporting project.

Sample topics include pitching to editors, adapting to multimedia and breaking into the field. The course will allow participants to apply their new skills to a real-life reporting assignment. Confirmed trainers include BBC’s Rob Cameron, freelance photojournalist Dean Cox and Nikolay Pavlov from Radio Free Europe RFE .

The course will be conducted in English. The course fee includes accommodation, but not travel costs.

Applications must be received by March 31, 2011 to get the early-bird discount. For more information, click here.
.Topic: Specialized Reporting

https://ijnet.org/opportunities/foreign-correspondent-course-offered-prague

Distance learning course on religion for journalists, media professionals and bloggers [Central Asia]

Deadline:25/02/11
Transitions Online (TOL)

Transitions Online (TOL), a Prague-based international publishing and media development organization, is currently offering a distance course, focused on religion coverage designed for journalists and bloggers.

The course on Religion and the Media was developed by TOL, specifically for the region of Central Asia. It aims to develop critical thinking, speaking, reading and writing skills of journalists.

Applications will be accepted from media professionals and citizen journalists from Central Asia (Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Turkmenistan). Citizens of those countries who currently resident elsewhere are also invited to apply.

Participation for the five-week course is free of charge and the working language is Russian. Participants who successfully finish the course will be awarded a TOL certificate. Those with the highest grades will be eligible for fully-funded scholarships at TOL journalism training courses in Prague.

In addition, successful participants will be offered an opportunity to become paid contributors on Central Asian issues to TOL’s award-winning Internet magazine http://www.tol.org. This project is funded by The National Endowment for Democracy.

For more information (in Russian), click here. To apply, contact with a resume and cover letter to Larisa Balanovskaya at larisa.balanovskaya@tol.org.
.Topic: Specialized Reporting

https://ijnet.org/opportunities/distance-learning-course-religion-journalists-media-professionals-an

Court Throws Out Suit By Tajik Opposition Weekly

DUSHANBE — A court in Dushanbe has begun hearing a lawsuit by a regional Interior Ministry official against the opposition weekly «Asia Plus,» but threw out a counterclaim filed by the paper against the same official, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Both cases concern an article published by «Asia Plus» on December 21 that accused Interior Ministry officials, including officers of the directorate against organized crimes in Sughd Province, of torturing suspects.

Anvar Taghoymurodov, head of that directorate, is demanding 1 million somonis ($227,128) in damages.

«Asia Plus» chief editor Marat Mamadshoev filed a counterclaim against Taghoymurodov for 150,000 somonis in damages. He told RFE/RL that Taghoymurodov’s suit could damage the weekly’s reputation.

Nusratullo Asadullo, the presiding judge at Dushanbe’s Firdawsi district court, said Mamadshoev failed to produce any official documentation to prove he is empowered to take legal action on behalf of «Asia Plus.»

Taghoymurodov’s lawyer, Jamshed Ghiyosos, said Umed Babakhanov, the owner of «Asia Plus,» should appear in court to defend the paper’s reputation. Babakhanov is currently resident in the United States, where his children are studying.

The next hearing is scheduled for February 24. Lawyer Shuhrat Qudratov, representing «Asia Plus,» said he is sure that at the next session the court will agree to hear the paper’s claim.

Tajik experts say this is the first time a court is hearing a case related to torture and violence against suspects. «Asia Plus» says it has written evidence to substantiate its accusations. But experts said that no court has ever given credence to such accusations.

Nargis Zokirova, an expert from the Human Rights Organization of Tajikistan, said it is difficult to speak about torture because it is almost impossible to inspect detention centers and prisons. She added that the authorities do not permit any domestic or international human rights organizations to visit suspects in detention centers.

Tajik experts say that all previous proven cases of torture were reclassified as abuse of power, and suspected torturers were tried for abuse of power, not for torture.

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajikistan_opposition_weekly_lawsuit/2309604.html

OSCE Office in Tajikistan calls for attackers of leading politician and journalist to be brought to justice

DUSHANBE, 11 February 2011

The Head of the OSCE Office in Tajikistan, Ambassador Ivar Vikki, today condemned the violent attack on Hikmatullo Saifullozoda, member of the Political Council of the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan and editor-in-chief of its newspaper, and called for the perpetrators to be brought to justice.

Saifullozoda has been hospitalized since 7 February, when he was severely beaten outside his Dushanbe home by unidentified men. He is recovering from concussion and serious injuries to his head.

«The attack on Mr. Saifullozoda is deeply troubling,» said Ambassador Vikki. «Freedom of speech is the cornerstone of a democratic society. Violence or threats against those who voice their opinion constitute an attack on values that are held with great respect in Tajikistan, with its history of intellectual debate and dialogue. OSCE commitments agreed by all participating States confirm the right of citizens to free and open information, and this right should be safeguarded by the state.”

Farrukhsho Dzhunaydov, Senior Media Analyst.

Dictators, They Aren’t Kissing Your Hand Because They Love You

The Egypt scenario that has shaken the world could spread to many post-Soviet countries where some aging presidents have been ruling for more than two decades. Seemingly tranquil now, Egypt-style civil disobedience cannot be ruled out in Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, or Belarus – all countries where dictatorship, nepotism, and corruption are flourishing.

In developments that moved steadily from the unlikely to the surreal, longtime President Hosni Mubarak – who became one of the world’s longest-serving presidents by rigging election after election for decades – claimed he was “fed up with being president,” before finally resigning on February 11.

In reality, though, it is the Egyptian people who were fed up. The average income in Egypt is about $2,070 per household, according to the World Bank. With about 20 percent of the population living below the poverty line, Mubarak and his family have an estimated wealth of between $50 billion and $70 billion. The Mubarak family owns properties around the globe, according to an IHS Global Insight report.

Faced with the unprecedented protests, Mubarak had said he feared “chaos” if he left too abruptly, but what he really fears is investigation and prosecution, loss of his ill-gained assets, and the exposure of his corrupt dealings. All dictators become hostage to their own sins and to those of their relatives and the narrow circle of insiders that they brought up to the state feeding trough.

It is interesting to look at post-Soviet Central Asia through the prism of Egypt’s experience.

Personal Feifdom

Let’s start with Tajikistan. This small, poor Central Asian state has been ruled by Emomali Rahmon since 1992, just a year after it gained independence. The former Soviet apparatchik governs Tajikistan like a personal fiefdom, and his extended family and inner circle are the beneficiaries of years of entrenched corruption.
As is the case in Egypt, social unrest could erupt in Tajikistan because of poverty. A recent government survey in the southern Hatlon region revealed that some 70 percent of the population is essentially subsisting on bread and tea. Each resident of Hatlon spends an average of $21 a month on food.

But Tajikistan, too, is a largely quiet country where widespread misery is moderated by remarkably low expectations.

Perhaps it makes more sense to look at Kazakhstan. It has been ruled by President Nursultan Nazarbaev for more than 20 years. Now 70 years old, however, Nazarbaev has no ready male heir to hand power off to. Former Nazarbaev son-in-law Rakhat Aliev has written that the president has three wives and plans to hand off power to a son by his third wife who is now only 6 years old.

‘Don’t Leave Your Post’

Egypt clearly sent a signal to Nazarbaev. For years now, he has counted on the apathy of the Kazakh people (compared, for instance, to the neighboring Kyrgyz who seem to have developed an allergy to dictatorship). But Egypt has shown him how quickly docility can turn to unrest and turmoil. Nazarbaev cannot have failed to notice the parallels.

Nonetheless, he claims to have received another signal, this time from the Kazakh people. “The main thing,” Nazarbaev said recently, “that I have understood from our people is, ‘Don’t leave your post’ and, ‘Continue to work on.’ I promise if there is such unanimity and popular support, I will work as long as I can.”

Without an obvious successor for Nazarbaev, the ruling elites seem to have come up with a consensus that it is necessary to freeze the status quo. As is the case with Mubarak, Nazarbaev and his inner circle are hostages to their own pasts. He simply must manage the transition to a successor or risk being swept up in a flood of popular rage.

The parallels with Egypt are significant. The Kazakh people have collected insults for many years, just like the Egyptians. There has been no way for them to vent their energies and a thousand undiscussed questions have accumulated under the thumb of the authorities.

Neighboring Turkmenistan also has bitter experience with eternal presidents. Former leader Saparmurat Niyazov was a lifelong president until his death in 2006, and he showed the world without question that the art of the personality cult is alive and well.

This kind of political culture is highly infectious. Niyazov was followed by Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov, who is already treading this familiar path. He recently accepted the honorary name Arkadag (Protector). Turkmen state television recently showed an elderly woman kissing his hand, a gesture the president accepted without shame or demurral.

Recently, a parade of Turkish military servicemen paused as it passed the president and all the soldiers kneeled down before him. Later, 600 girls took to the stadium and formed the word “Arkadag” with their bodies, while participants sang a song called “Thank You, Protector.”

And, of course, neighboring Uzbekistan has followed the same path. In 2005, longtime President Islam Karimov ordered troops to fire on his own people. President since 1990, he is one of the world’s most oppressive dictators and a real time bomb.

Now he is 73. He has no sons, but his wife, Tatyana Karimova, is an economist by training, and they have two daughters, Gulnara and Lola. According to “Der Spiegel,” Gulnara Karimova has assets estimated at $570 million. She reportedly controls the lucrative oil and gas industries, as well as Uzbekistan’s telecom and construction sectors. Her opaque business interests are believed to extend to Moscow, Dubai, and Geneva. It is possible the Karimov family and the ruling elite would like to see her become the successor, but there are many in Uzbekistan who would oppose a continuation of the Karimov dynasty and, of course, the installation of a female leader.

After decades in power, any of these leaders could be the next to decide he is “fed up with being president.”

Cholpon Orozobekova is a Kyrgyz journalist based in Geneva. She has worked for BBC radio, RFE/RL, IWPR, and as editor in chief of the independent newspaper «De Facto.» The views expressed in this commentary are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/central_asian_dictators_belarus_egypt_mubarak/2306999.html

Tajik Media Alliance tackles challenges, protects freedom of speech

On 11 February, the Tajik Media Alliance held a forum in Dushanbe to discuss the contemporary threats to the freedom of speech and development of the media. The forum held in the National Press Center was supported by the Open Society Institute’s office in Tajikistan.

About 50 media managers and journalists from all regions of Tajikistan and representatives of international organizations accredited in Dushanbe and public officials took part in the forum.

Secretary general of the Media Alliance Khurshedjon Niyozov told the Avesta news agency that participants of the forum have discussed the existing problems in the Tajik media environment. “The time has come to develop mechanisms to neutralize these problems and consolidate the media community to better protect our professional rights and interests”.

The Media Alliance was created in 2005. At present, it unites the leading Tajik media, both printing and electronic.

www.avesta.tj

Islamic Opposition Criticizes Tajik Government

Tajikistan’s main opposition party accused the government today of violating civil rights and neglecting its people.

The Islamic Revival Party of Tajikistan, the only officially registered Islamic party in Central Asia, said in a statement that corrupt, authoritarian rule has eroded democracy and «national unity.»

The party issued its statement after unknown assailants attacked Hikmatullo Saifullozoda, editor of its newspaper, ‘Najot,» and outspoken government critic, on Monday.

The ruling People’s Democratic Party denied the accusations.

It said Tajikistan, ruled since 1992 by President Imomali Rakhmon, had free media and eight functioning political parties.

The Islamic Revival Party formed the core of the alliance that fought government troops in a civil war from 1992 to 1997.

It now occupies the only two opposition-held seats in parliament.

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajik_islam_politics/2302447.html

Independent Tajik Weekly Found Guilty Of Libel

DUSHANBE — A Tajik court has found an independent weekly guilty of libel and ordered it to pay the Agriculture Ministry damages over an article that accused the ministry of corruption, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

District court Judge Dilorom Abdurahimova ruled in Dushanbe on February 8 that «Millat» must pay 1,500 somons ($333) to the ministry in moral damages and make an official apology to it. The trial had lasted more than one year.

At the end of 2009, «Millat» wrote an article about corruption in Tajikistan in which it quoted the country’s Anticorruption Agency and some members of the parliament as calling the Agriculture Ministry the most corrupt entity in Tajikistan.

The ministry said the article was libelous and asked for 1 million somons from «Millat» as compensation.

An Agriculture Ministry representative said on February 8 it was satisfied because the court ruled the newspaper must publicly apologize for the corruption allegation in the article, as well as pay for moral damages caused by the article.

But «Millat» lawyer Junaid Ibodov said the court’s ruling was unjustified, because the newspaper had quoted officials responsible for fighting corruption and had official statistics that showed corruption levels at the ministry.

Ibodov said «Millat» would appeal the ruling to the Dushanbe city court.

Akbar Sattor, the head of Tajikistan’s Union of Journalists, said on February 8 that the court ruling was made to put pressure on journalists.

«Millat» chief editor Adolat Mirzo said the court decision would not change the weekly’s determination to fight corruption.

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajik_newspaper_guilty_libel/2304365.html