Kazakh Journalist Flees To Ukraine, Fearing Prosecution

ASTANA — A Kazakh journalist says she has fled Kazakhstan with her husband and two young children to avoid prosecution. 

Natalya Sadyqova told RFE/RL on March 27 that she and her family were currently in Ukraine.

Sadyqova said investigators in her native city of Aqtobe questioned her last month regarding an article published in the opposition «Respublika» online news portal about corruption among local officials.

Investigators told Sadyqova they suspected she was the author and informed her that former lawmaker Marat Itegulov had filed a libel suit against the author, who was listed as Bakhyt Ilyasova.

Sadyqova insists she had nothing to do with the article.

She said she left Kazakhstan on March 9 after police sources informed her she might be arrested.

A court in Aqtobe issued a warrant for her arrest on March 17.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kazakhstan-journalist-flees-to-ukraine/25311420.html

Alumni Engagement Innovation Fund (AEIF)

The State Department created the Alumni Engagement Innovation Fund (AEIF) in 2011 to support alumni initiatives that promote shared values and innovative solutions to global challenges. The competition provides small grants to teams of past and current participants of U.S. government-sponsored exchange programs to carry out public service projects that utilize skills and knowledge they have gained through their exchange experiences. To participate, alumni must be members of the International Exchange Alumni (IEA) global online community and form teams of at least five IEA community members. Proposed projects must embody one of the AEIF themes. In 2013, 53 grants of up $25,000 were awarded to alumni teams to support their public service projects.

Log in to view the 2013 winners.

The following themes were selected for AEIF 2014:

  • ·         Empowering Women
  • ·         Outreach to Underserved Communities
  • ·         Entrepreneurship and Youth Employment
  • ·         Expanded Access to Education
  • ·         Environmental Protection
  • ·         Government Transparency
  • ·         Freedom of Expression
  • ·         Conflict Resolution
  • ·         Citizen Security
  • ·         Promoting Civil Society

Below you will find the AEIF 2014 Timeline:

  • ·         April 1: AEIF Begins
  • ·         April 23: Proposals are due by 11:59 EST
  • ·         May 6: Finalists are announced, and alumni can log in to vote for their favorite projects
  • ·         May 27: Final proposals are due by 11:59 EST
  • ·         Late June: AEIF 2014 winners are announced

 

Shafoat Kabilova

 

Grant Assistant / Alumni Coordinator

U.S. Embassy/Public Diplomacy Section

109 A, I.Somoni Ave., Dushanbe, Tajikistan

Dushanbe, Tajikistan

e-mail: KobilovaS@state.gov

tel: (992-372) 29 23 14

cell phone (98)580 70 67

http://dushanbe.usembassy.gov

Reporters Without Borders Names ‘Enemies Of Internet’

By Bruce Pannier and Andrius Kuncina

March 12, 2014

The media freedom organization Reporters Without Borders has released its annual list of » Enemies of the Internet,» which this year includes three of the world’s leading democracies.

The report was issued on March 12 to coincide with World Day Against Cyber Censorship and seeks to draw attention to «government units and agencies that implement online censorship and surveillance.»

Antoine Hery, the head of RSF’s World Press Freedom Index, told RFE/RL that many chronic offenders remained on this year’s list.

«Belarus, of course, and Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan, etcetera — those countries are looking pretty much uniquely at the Russian model and the Russian model is absolutely terrible,» he said. «We have a feeling that those countries are getting worse and worse every year. But that’s not only related to their online activities or censorship of the Internet, it’s related to [the situation of the media] in general.»

Johann Bihr, the head of RSF’s European and Asian desk, noted that tactics used by different governments to block or control the Internet vary.

In the case of Turkmenistan, he said, the problem is basic.

«Turkmenistan remains a news and information black hole where online censorship begins before you connect to the Internet, thanks to prohibitive prices and a very poor quality,» he said. «So, only less than 10 percent of the population is connected —has access to the Internet.»

In Uzbekistan, where Internet access is better than in Turkmenistan, a special group has been established to monitor Internet use and screen suspect sites.

«Uzbekistan remains a digital tyranny where the Internet is tightly controlled by a commission called the Experts Commission on Information and Mass Communications,» said Bihr. «This is a structure which reports directly to the Council of Ministers and which ensures that all the independent and opposition sources of information are censored.»

Belarus exerts tight control over access to websites outside the country but also uses the Internet as a net to catch critics of the regime.

«Belarus now has ensured that the flow of information on the Internet is tightly controlled and more and more bloggers and netizens are arrested based on various pretexts for informing online,» said Bihr.

But in the Commonwealth of Independent States, it is Russia and the country’s security service that seem to have the tightest grip over the Internet.

«This year, we have included the Russian security service — the FSB [Federal Security Service]— among the Internet enemies,» said Bihr. «This is a token for the Russian surveillance system known as SORM [System of Operative-Investigative Measures], which allows the FSB to have direct access to the servers of the Internet access providers throughout the country.»

Benjamin Ismail of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk says Pakistani authorities are not as technologically proficient in blocking or screening the Internet, but they still have their methods.

Notable Newcomers

«Pakistan is one [of the countries included in the latest report], not maybe because its censorship is the most sophisticated that we have encountered, but because the will of the authorities [to improve it] is very strong,» he said. «Last year, there was a public call for foreign technology companies to make a [bid] to the government in order for the government to implement a national filter system for the Internet in Pakistan.»

Gregoir Pouget, head of RSF’s new media desk, says that, despite a new president, Hassan Rohani, seen as a relative moderate, Iran remains mired in the same situation it has been in for a few years.

«We haven’t noticed any difference yet between 2013 and 2014,» he said. «I mean, Twitter is still blocked, Facebook is still blocked, YouTube is still blocked. There are many websites that are still blocked in Iran. [Also], Iran is still trying to create its own national Internet called the Halal Internet. So, at the moment, we haven’t noticed any difference [between the current and the previous administration].»

Hery also points out that this year’s list includes notable newcomers.

«The very new thing for this year’s edition of the ‘Enemies of the Internet’ report is the fact that we have included three main democracies that were not in the previous edition,» he said. «These would be the United Kingdom, India, and the United States, with its famous and very secretive NSA — the National Security Agency.»

The report says intelligence agencies in the three nations «are no better than their Chinese, Russian, Iranian, or Bahraini counterparts» in terms of trampling Internet freedoms.

http://www.rferl.org/content/media-internet-report-rsf/25294297.html

Conflict reporting seminar open

Reporters with an interest in conflict journalism are invited to attend this conference in Israel.

The Media in Conflicts Seminar (MICS) is an academic and professional communications program presented bythe Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, Israel’s first private institution for higher education.

The five-day program seeks to introduce journalists to the challenges of conflict reporting, help them create aprofessional network, and expose them to the world’s most covered conflict zone. Attendees will participate in lectures and workshops on conflict journalism, terrorism, defense and security, and tour Jerusalem and other conflict areas.

Attendees’ stay in Israel is funded by the program, but does not include airfare to Israel.

This year’s MICS program will take place from Aug. 31-Sept. 4. The deadline to apply is May 15.

For more information, click here: http://rvzr-a.akamaihd.net/sd/apps/interstitial/loading.html?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mics.org.il%2F%23!about&v=MS4xLjA=&p=TWVkaWEgUGxheWVy&o=QUQgT1BUSU9OUw==&a=QURTIEJZ&q=bj1NZWRpYSBQbGF5ZXImaD1ydnpyLWEuYWthbWFpaGQubmV0JmM9Z3JlZW4mbz1pbnRlciZkPSZ0PSZhPTYyMDAmcz0xMDAxJnc9aWpuZXQub3Jn

 

Film festival accepting submissions

Durban International Film Festival

Filmmakers may submit their projects to be screened at this film festival in South Africa.

The Durban International Film Festival is accepting film submissions to be screened at its 35th annual celebration this summer. This year’s festival runs from July 18 to 22, and its theme is “continent of contrast.”

Filmmakers may submit films in four categories: feature-length film, short film, feature-length documentary and short documentary.

There is no cost to submit a film for consideration, but DVD screeners must be received by the festival’s committee by March 24 in order for films to be considered for the festival.

For more information, click here: http://rvzr-a.akamaihd.net/sd/apps/interstitial/loading.html?u=http%3A%2F%2Fstatic.squarespace.com%2Fstatic%2F51a691d7e4b0930fcb0612b7%2Ft%2F52f4c66ce4b08200b4dba4bd%2F1391773292146%2FDIFF_FAQ_0214.pdf&v=MS4xLjA=&p=TWVkaWEgUGxheWVy&o=QUQgT1BUSU9OUw==&a=QURTIEJZ&q=bj1NZWRpYSBQbGF5ZXImaD1ydnpyLWEuYWthbWFpaGQubmV0JmM9Z3JlZW4mbz1pbnRlciZkPSZ0PSZhPTYyMDAmcz0xMDAxJnc9aWpuZXQub3Jn

 

UN launches photo contest

Photographers from across the globe are invited to submit pictures to this contest that celebrates the practice of family farming.

Following the United Nations’ announcement that 2014 was to be the International Year of Family Farming (IYFF), the Food and Agricultural Organization has organized a photo contest to highlight the importance of familyfarming.

Photo entries should represent the theme “feeding the world, caring for the earth.” Entries must visually document the strength, potential and challenges of sustainable, multifunctional family farmers worldwide, in all their diversity and contexts.

Seven winning photographs will be chosen: one first-place and six runners-up (one runner-up for each continent). Five popular choice photos will be selected by the public through an online voting system. The winning photos will be announced in October at a IYFF event.

The first-place winner will receive EUR400. The six runners-up will each receive EUR200. Each popular selection will receive EUR100.

The deadline to submit photos is May 1.

For more information, click here: http://rvzr-a.akamaihd.net/sd/apps/interstitial/loading.html?u=http%3A%2F%2Fextra.agriculturesnetwork.org%2Fsurvey%2Fphotocompetition%2Findex.html&v=MS4xLjA=&p=TWVkaWEgUGxheWVy&o=QUQgT1BUSU9OUw==&a=QURTIEJZ&q=bj1NZWRpYSBQbGF5ZXImaD1ydnpyLWEuYWthbWFpaGQubmV0JmM9Z3JlZW4mbz1pbnRlciZkPSZ0PSZhPTYyMDAmcz0xMDAxJnc9aWpuZXQub3Jn

Tajik Journalist Fined for Collective Libel

State-sponsored arts bodies win claim that the country’s intelligentsia was defamed.
12 Mar 14

A case in which a well-known journalist in Tajikistan was found to have libelled intellectuals as a group has been described as “chilling” for freedom of speech.

On February 25, a court in the capital Dushanbe found against both Olga Tutubalina and the Asia-Plus news agency where she is an editor, in a libel case in which it was alleged that a blog entry she published last year caused collective “physical and mental suffering” to intellectuals as a class of people.

The three plaintiffs represented five institutions including the Union of Writers, the Academy of Sciences and the Union of Artists, Composers and Architects – all state-sponsored bodies.

The court imposed a fine of 30,000 somoni (6,200 US dollars) and instructed the defendants to publish an apology. The plaintiffs had been seeking 200,000 somoni.

Tutubalina posted the offending piece on the Asia-Plus website in June 2013. She alleged that the intelligentsia as a whole allowed the authorities to use it as a tool against the opposition.

Tutubalina cited the case of well-known poet Bozor Sobir, whose returned from a long exile in 2011 at the invitation of Tajik president Imomali Rahmon. Sobir was one of the founders of the democratic movement in Tajikistan in the early 1990s, but Tutubalina noted that following his homecoming, he called on his fellow-intellectuals to rally around Rahmon and questioned the need for a multi-party system.

She quoted a letter from Vladimir Lenin to writer Maxim Gorky in 1919 in which he condemned “the educated classes, the lackeys of capital who consider themselves the brains of the nation. In fact they are not its brains but its shit.”

The entry on Tutubalina’s popular blog, which often covers controversial issues like pressures on the political opposition or the plight of Tajik migrants in Russia, received more than 24,000 views and over 50 comments.

Mehmon Bakhti of the Union of Writers, who was among those behind the lawsuit but not a plaintiff, refused to comment on the verdict, apart from indicating that he and his colleagues intended to hand over the damage payments to children’s’ charities.

One of Tutubalina’s lawyers, Inoyat Inoyatov, told reporters that the verdict was groundless, and was the result of a politically-motivated case intended to silence a vocal critic. He said the defence team would be appealing against the decision.

The United States embassy issued a statement expressing concern over the verdict which it said would have “a chilling effect on freedom of the press in Tajikistan”.

The OSCE’s Representative on Freedom of the Media, Dunja Mijatović, also criticised the decision, particularly the idea that an ill-defined body of people can be collectively defamed.

“If those who can claim injury are not clearly defined, any disagreement of opinion could end up as a damage claim,” she said in a statement, urging the Tajik authorities to allow “public debate without triggering financial penalties”.

The Tajikistan Bureau for Human Rights and Rule of Law said the court’s findings violated constitutional provisions upholding the right to freedom of expression and banning state censorship.

“As a media professional, the journalist has right to express her personal view,” the group said in a statement.

Media activists say the case against Tutubalina could encourage more of the self-censorship that is already widespread among journalists in Tajikistan.

In its 2013 report on media freedom, the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranked Tajikistan 115th out of 180 countries surveyed, describing the situation in the country as” difficult”. In its section on Tajikistan, RSF wrote that “the arbitrary blocking of independent news websites has become common”.

Although libel is treated only as a civil offence in Tajikistan after being decriminalised in 2012, insulting the president remains a criminal offence.

Nuriddin Karshiboev, head of the Independent Association of Mass Media, agreed that the pressure on Tutubalina was intended to intimidate other journalists.

He sees the verdict as a “blow to freedom of expression in our country” and a “political performance”.

He suggested that the fact she is not an ethnic Tajik might have caused particular offence to local intellectuals.

Karshiboev urged the media community in Tajikistan to stand up and be counted whenever journalists came under this kind of pressure.

“We need to unite and demonstrate solidarity among journalists against such initiatives,” he said.

Hilvatshoh Mahmud, director of the Ozodagon media group, told IWPR that the libel verdict signalled that the judiciary remained subject to government. He warned that the case might encourage state officials to sue journalists whenever the latter expressed opinions they did not like.

“The precedents for this exist,” he said.

Nilufar Karimova is an IWPR-trained journalist in Tajikistan. 

This article was produced under two IWPR projects: Empowering Media and Civil Society Activists to Support Democratic Reforms in Tajikistan, funded by the European Union; and the Human Rights Reporting, Confidence Building and Conflict Information Programme, funded by the Foreign Ministry of Norway.The contents of this article are the sole responsibility of IWPR and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of either the European Union or the Norwegian foreign ministry.

http://iwpr.net/report-news/tajik-journalist-fined-collective-libel

Self-editing tips for journalists

by Steve Buttry

If you’re a journalist who has benefited from the multiple layers of editing that newsrooms traditionally had, you need to take more responsibility for the quality of your content.

If you’re tweeting or blogging, you probably already are publishing content unedited (and probably have suffered the embarrassment of some errors a copy editor would have caught).

If we work out our editing systems right, we will give most non-live content at least one edit before publication, maybe more. But the inescapable fact is that your copy is going to get less editing than you’re used to. So you need to be a better self-editor. Below are some tips. These might also be helpful for assigning editors who need to become better copy editors.

Master SEO headlines

You may be writing your own blog headlines. You should be suggesting you’re own headlines for stories that you turn in. Writing headlines also helps you determine whether your story is well-focused. If you can’t write a good headline, maybe you should work a bit more to get to the point of the story.

Make one last read through your copy. Once you think you’re done, whether you’re writing a tweet or an investigative project, read it through yourself, not for rewriting or fact-checking (this comes after fact-checking). This final read is just for clarity, voice, spelling and grammar. For instance, in reading through this blog post before publication, I caught the «you’re» in the paragraph above that should be «your.» I left it in to make this point. It was too good to fix in that particular spot.

Read aloud

I once wrote in a story about a drought that the city was encouraging water consumption, when I meant water conservation. I am sure I didn’t read that drought story aloud. Conservation and consumption may look a lot alike, but that’s the kind of error that jumps out when you read your work aloud.

Use an accuracy checklist.

You are responsible for the accuracy of your content. Use a checklist to make sure everything is accurate.

Improve your grammar and word usage

Schools don’t teach grammar as well as they used to, so even the smart students with strong writing skills who go into journalism often have weaknesses in grammar, spelling and word usage. Yes, it’s better to learn these matters in your youth, but you can still improve as a professional. I have blogged on some grammar matters that confuse many journalists, and the American Copy Editors Society has lots of resources to help with grammar and word usage.

Use spellcheck (but don’t rely on it)

There is no excuse for failing to catch errors that your computer can point out to you. But don’t routinely change potential errors highlighted by your computer (some of them are right). And don’t make the computer your only spellcheck. Use the dictionary to check the spelling (and usage) of words you aren’t sure about.

Make every word count.

I blogged last year with advice for writing tight copy. By planning to write tight, setting a brisk pace and being demanding in your rewrite, you can turn in cleaner copy.

These tips are excerpted from a post on The Buttry Diary and published on IJNet with the author’s permission.

Steve Buttry is digital transformation editor for Digital First Media.

Image CC-licensed on Flickr via unclesond.

http://ijnet.org/blog/self-editing-tips-journalists

Russian Media Again Under Attack, This Time With Ukraine As Pretext

Many Russia-watchers have grown accustomed to beginning their day with a quick run through «Dorogaya redaktsiya,» the often-playful Twitter feed of Lenta.ru, one of Russia’s most popular sources of independent online news.

But «Dorogaya redaktsiya» went silent on March 12, replacing its Twitter icon with funereal black and issuing a final tweet linking to an open letter from the Lenta staff protesting the ouster of its longtime editor, Galina Timchenko, and her replacement with a Kremlin-friendly candidate, Aleksei Goreslavsky.

«We believe that this appointment is direct pressure on the Lenta editorial staff,» says the letter, which includes the signatures of more than 80 editors, correspondents, and administrators. «The problem is not that we have nowhere left to work. The problem is that you have nothing left to read.»

Thirty-nine staffers have since quit in protest.

http://www.rferl.org/content/media-russia-lenta-sacking/25295996.html

2014 Democracy Outreach / Alumni Grants Program

The Embassy of the United States of America is now accepting applications for the 2014 Alumni Grants Program.  Alumni of all U.S. Government-funded exchange and training programs are eligible. USG alumni must be registered on the Exchange Alumni website https://alumni.state.gov to participate in the 2014 Alumni Grants Program.

The purpose of this program is to provide grants to organizations that have USG alumni as members or to individual alumni for activities that support democratic advancement and economic reform in Tajikistan. The program aims to provide alumni with networking opportunities to further the professional development of alumni and their colleagues and to assist alumni in implementing and disseminating the concepts learned during exchange programs. The amount of grants must not exceed $5,000 for organizations and $3,000 for individuals.

Funds may be used for the following:

·         To initiate a public or community service program;

·         To provide support for alumni association events;

·         To organize training programs or conferences for professional colleagues and/or other alumni;

·         To provide continued funding for existing alumni centers, and minimal start-up costs for alumni associations;

·         To organize and plan networking events;

·         To develop and publish curricula, textbooks, or related reference or educational materials;

·         To publish public information pamphlets or brochures on topics that further USG assistance goals;

·         To conduct other projects that support democratic and economic reform initiatives.

Funds may not be used for the following:

·         To support projects requested by non-USG alumni organizations and individuals;

·         To support projects relating to political activity, charitable activity and/or humanitarian aid, fund-raising campaigns, commercial projects and those that duplicate existing projects;

·         To pay for international travel outside of Tajikistan, including travel to/from the United States;

·         To pay for speakers traveling from the United States;

·         To pay salaries and honorariums for alumni involved in the project;

·         To support organization’s expansion or acquisition of equipment;

·         To support infrastructural projects;

·         Projects with a computer based English translation.

All project activities should start after May 01, 2014.

Application Submission:

Proposals must be received no later than March 31, 2014.  Proposals and SF form 424 attached separately should be submitted in English to:

U.S. Embassy, Public Affairs Section

109 A Ismoili Somoni Avenue, Dushanbe, Tajikistan

Email: alumnitajikistan@state.gov

Application forms are available on our web site http://dushanbe.usembassy.gov/alumnigrants.html or can be requested by email. Please use the e-mail above for any questions.