Все записи автора admin

Summer Course “Online Free Expression and Communication Policy Advocacy: a Toolkit for Media Development”

Summer Course “Online Free Expression and Communication Policy Advocacy: a Toolkit for Media Development” at Central European University (CEU) in Budapest, Hungary, from June 18 to 29, 2012

CEU’s summer school invites applications from graduate students, junior faculty, researchers and practitioners in universities and other institutions from all over the world.

This intensive summer course is designed to help both researchers and activists gain new insights into the role which civil society can play in advocating for free expression online and communication policy change. Sessions will highlight the potential of technology and online tools for mobilizing and organizing constituencies and for enhancing the security and privacy of advocates. Participants will be exposed to a wide range of practical and theoretical views related to communication policy advocacy and online tools and tactics, and learn how to integrate research into communication policy advocacy.

Course Directors:

Kate Coyer, CEU

Susan Abbott, Internews Network

Monroe Price, Annenberg School for Communication, U Pennsylvania

Leslie Harris, Center for Democracy and Technology

The application deadline is February 15, 2012.

Financial aid is available.

More detailed information available at http://summer.ceu.hu/ online-2012

Summer University Office
1051 Budapest, Nádor utca 9, Hungary
http://www.sun.ceu.hu
e-mail:summeru@ceu.hu
tel: 36 1 327 3811
fax: 36 1 327 3124

http://summer.ceu.hu/ online-2012

THE U.S. EMBASSY IN DUSHANBE REQUESTS PROJECT PROPOSALS FOR THE 2012 DEMOCRACY OUTREACH / ALUMNI GRANTS PROGRAM

The Embassy of the United States of America is now accepting applications for the 2012 Alumni Grants Program. Alumni of all U.S. Government-funded exchange and training programs, including FLEX, UGRAD, Muskie, the International Visitor Leadership Program, Community Connections, Open World, USDA Cochran and FEP exchanges, Department of Commerce SABIT exchanges, and those of other implementers are eligible. USG alumni must be registered on the State Alumni website to participate in 2012 Alumni Grants Program.

You can easily and quickly register yourself at https://alumni.state.gov

The purpose of the 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.

Projects NOT funded by the Alumni Program include those requested by non-USG alumni organizations and individuals, those relating to partisan political activity, charitable activity and/or humanitarian aid, fund-raising campaigns, commercial projects and those that duplicate existing projects. Grant proposals for international travel by alumni must include a substantial cost share and explain how the proposed travel will benefit the wider community.

Proposals must be received no later than February 20, 2012. Proposals should contain clearly formulated goals and target groups, and show the ability of the applying organization/individual to carry out the project aims. Proposals and SF form 424 attached separately should be submitted in English.

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.

http://dushanbe.usembassy.gov/

RUSSIA / TAJIKISTAN: Tajik opposition journalist stabbed in Moscow

Press release/ Communiqué de presse
13.01.2012

English: http://en.rsf.org/russia-tajik-opposition-journalist-13-01-2012,41676.html
Français: http://fr.rsf.org/tadjikistan-un-journaliste-d-opposition-tadjik-13-01-2012,41671.html
Farsi: http://www.rsf-persan.org/article17173.html

RUSSIA / TAJIKISTAN: Tajik opposition journalist stabbed in Moscow

Reporters Without Borders is shocked by the assault yesterday on the Tajik journalist Dodojon Atovulloev, who was stabbed in a Moscow restaurant, and calls on the Russian police to do all it can to identify his attacker and those behind the crime.

“All avenues must be explored, taking account of the professional activities of this noted opposition journalist,” the press freedom organization said.
“Dodojon Atovulloev is well-known for his critical views towards the Tajik authorities and the serious threats to which he has been subjected have led Germany to give him political refugee status.

“His political activities in the Vatandor movement have earned him many enemies.”

Atovulloev was stabbed twice in the stomach by an unidentified attacker in a restaurant in central Moscow yesterday evening. His attacker fled.

The journalist underwent emergency surgery in hospital and is now out of danger.
The police are treating the attack as a case of grievous bodily harm and the interior ministry said a 23-year-old Tajik citizen was arrested this morning. It is too early to say whether he was the attacker.

Atovulloev is the founder and editor of the Tajik opposition monthly Tcharogi Ruz (Daily Light). It was the first privately-owned newspaper to be recognized after Tajikistan gained independence.

The newspaper made a name for itself for its tough criticism of the government of President Emomali Rakhmon. Atovulloev has been the target of death threats and multiple court proceedings, and was forced to leave the country in 2001. He shares his time between Hamburg and Moscow, where he now has his editorial headquarters.

Last year, Tajik judicial authorities submitted an extradition request to Moscow, which was rejected.

http://en.rsf.org/russia-tajik-opposition-journalist-13-01-2012,41676.html

Tajik Media Organizations Condemn Attack on Dodojon Atovulloev

Joint Statement

Dushanbe, 13 January 2012

The Union of Journalists of Tajikistan (UJT), the National Association of Independent Mass Media (NANSMIT) and the Media Alliance of Tajikistan (MAT) condemn the attack on the Tajik journalist Dodojon Atovulloev and require a thorough investigation of this case from the Russian Federal Law Enforcement Bodies.

According to media reports, on 12 January, between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. and unknown assailant attacked Atovulloev in the premises of the Italian restaurant “Viaggio” in Moscow. Atovulloev was stabbed twice with a knife; an ambulance delivered him to the Sklifosofsky hospital.

In recent years, Atovulloev positioned himself as a politician confronting with the Tajik authorities and using extensively the freedom of speech.

It is unclear whether the attempt upon the journalist is related to his professional activities; nevertheless, such brutal crimes must be punished with the utmost rigor of the law.

Akbarali Sattorov, Chairman, UJT
Nuriddin Karshiboev, Chairman, NANSMIT
Khurshed Niyozov, Secretary General, MAT

www.nansmit.tj

Tajik Opposition Activist Stabbed In Moscow

By Tom Balmforth

MOSCOW – A Tajik opposition activist is in intensive care after being attacked in central Moscow and stabbed with a knife several times by an unidentified attacker late on January 12.

Dodojon Atovulloev, a 56-year-old Tajik dissident journalist in exile and outspoken critic of Tajik President Emomali Rahmon, has undergone surgery in Moscow’s Sklifosovsky Hospital.

A brother-in-law who lives in Moscow, Doro Zabehov, told RFE/RL’s Tajik Service that Atovulloev had been «under constant threats and pressures» for years.

«Even since he left Tajikistan, he has been persecuted,» Zabehov said. «We knew there were constant risks to his life, but he would never talk about them. He wouldn’t tell us who his enemies were, so I won’t speculate.»

Police discovered Atovulloev with two knife wounds on Komsomolsky Prospekt in central Moscow.

Contracted Attack?

An unidentified police official told the Interfax news agency that the attack may have been contracted. The source said someone had arranged to meet Atovulloev on his own at the «Viadzhio» Italian restaurant near his house, where he was attacked.

Atovulloev’s driver indicated that he last saw Atovulloev’ when he dropped him off at home earlier that evening.

“We went to two places and then I took him home,» he said. «He went in. Then I got a phone call last night and we all went to the hospital.”

The police have launched a criminal case under legislation covering the “premeditated infliction of grievous bodily harm.”

Police apprehended a man who was found with blood on his hands within hours of the attack but released him after concluding that he was not connected to the attack. Interfax quoted a Moscow police spokesman as saying that closed-circuit television footage had cleared the suspect of involvement.

There are no other known suspects at this time, police said.

‘Colorful Figure’

Police are also analyzing CCTV footage and will question Atovulloev once his condition improves.

Atovulloev left Tajikistan in December 1992. He has since lived mainly in Moscow, but spent one year in Germany as well.

He has remained active as a journalist critical of the Tajik authorities throughout.

Atovulloev last visited Tajikistan in 2004, but left abruptly after three days under threat of arrest.

He is the owner of “Charogi Ruz,” one of Tajikistan’s first independent newspapers, which is critical of President Rahmon.

Daniil Kislov, editor in chief of Ferghana.ru, a Moscow-based independent Central Asian news website, told RFE/RL’s Russian Service that Atovulloev’s safe haven in Moscow has long been an irritant for the Tajik government.

«Dodojon Atovulloev has become a dissident who is inconvenient for the regime [in Tajikistan] and he remains one of Rahmon’s uncompromising enemies in the information sphere,» Kislov said. «He has always used the strongest terms and definitions with regard to the Tajik president, openly calling him a drug baron and an alcoholic.»

Recently, he was one of the most outspoken critics of Rahmon during the spat between Russia and Tajikistan in November over the jailing of two pilots, one of them Russian, in Dushanbe.

Atovulloev was reportedly the first to suggest that the pilots were jailed because the son of a relative of the Tajik president had been arrested in Moscow.

Fierce rhetoric between the two countries followed and Moscow deported hundreds of Tajik migrant workers. Tajikistan eventually pardoned the two pilots, and the criminal case on charges of drug trafficking was subsequently dropped against the son of a Tajik official in Russia.

Dushanbe has requested Atovulloev’s extradition numerous times, but Russia has refused.

Atovulloev is a colorful figure in the Tajik opposition and gained a reputation in the 1980s as a “breath of fresh air” for his articles in the periodical «Javononi Tojikiston» («Tajikistan’s Youth»), which were critical of the authorities and stood out against the otherwise monochrome local Soviet press.

Contacted by RFE/RL’s Tajik Service, Tajik lawmaker Suhrob Sharipov downplayed Dodojon’s role and impact, calling him one of many opposition figures living in Russia.

«Dodojon Atovulloev doesn’t have any weight as a political figure; he has no impact on Tajikistan’s politics,» Sharipov said. «He is an opposition figure, a journalist who left for Russia many years ago and has been working there since. I don’t see any reason why [Tajikistan] would want to assassinate him.»

with additional reporting by RFE/RL correspondent Farangis Najibullah and RFE/RL’s Tajik, Russian, and Uzbek services

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/tajik_opposition_leader_atovuloyev_stabbed_moscow/24450461.html

Journalism seminar on crisis reporting offered

Journalists can attend a seminar in Finland.

The University of Helsinki hosts a one-day seminar on crisis, trauma and journalism.

The seminar aims to analyze the coverage and reporting of crises in the media from a perspective of media research and ethics. Topics include how to encounter people in distress, how to shoot visual material of them and how to interview them.

Other topics include how news media get organized during a crisis, the experiences of a field reporter in connection to the newsroom and why some disasters become media spectacles.

The seminar will be held January 27.

For more information, click here: http://www.helsinki.fi/crisisandcommunication/network/seminar_crisistraumajournalism.html

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/journalism-seminar-crisis-reporting-offered

Kazakh TV Station’s Journalists Complain Of Police Harassment

ALMATY, Kazakhstan — Journalists from the independent online television station Stan-TV say police in the restive city of Zhanaozen are hindering the media’s work, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

Stan-TV chief editor Asel Limzhanova, along with journalists Zhuldyz Toleu and Qasym Amanzhol, said in Almaty on January 11 that local police and security forces have been trying to block their coverage of the mass strike of oil workers in the western city of Zhanaozen since May.

They said the tension between police and journalists worsened after the deadly clashes between striking oil workers and police took place in the city on December 16.

The Stan-TV journalists added that they and their relatives had been under pressure since last summer as they started covering the standoff between oil workers and the OzenMunaiGaz oil company.

After the deadly clashes last month in Zhanaozen and the nearby town of Shetpe that left at least 17 protesters dead, the Stan-TV journalists and their relatives were summoned more often to police for questioning.

«As we are currently under police scrutiny we would like to state publicly that we do not use drugs, we are not associated with any extremist group, and do not possess any weapons,» Limzhanova said.

The three also stated that they have officially called on President Nursultan Nazarbaev to protect them from security officials’ and law enforcement officers’ «lawlessness.»

The Almaty-based Stan-TV makes video reports from the five Central Asian countries and posts them on its website. It is associated with Kazakh businessman Mukhtar Ablyazov, who is wanted in Kazakhstan on criminal charges but lives in self-imposed exile in England.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kazakh_tv_journalists_complain_of_police_harassment/24449015.html

Report: Media Deaths Rose In 2011

The International Federation oOf Journalists (IFJ), says more than 100 journalists or other media staff were killed in 2011 – an increase in comparison with 2010.

According to the IFJ, violence against the media was worst in 2011 in Pakistan, Iraq and Mexico, with 11 media deaths reported in each country.

The organizaton says a total of 106 journalists were killed in 2011, compared with 94 in 2010.

It said that 20 more journalists or other media staff died in accidents and natural disasters in 2011.

The IFJ has appealed to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to lead an effort to better protect journalists, saying many governments around the world “are in denial or indifferent to what has become a regular pattern of targeted killings of journalists.”

The IFJ says it represents more than 600,000 journalists in more than 100 countries around the world.

compiled from agency reports

http://www.rferl.org/content/media_deaths_rose_in_2011/24439112.html

Kazakh Senate Approves Controversial Broadcast Law

ASTANA — Kazakh media NGOs and international experts say that country’s new broadcast law would put restrictions on the freedom of information, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

The draft law — initiated by the Communications and Information Ministry and passed by the Senate on December 28 — has been sent to President Nursultan Nazarbaev for final approval.

It requires all foreign television and radio stations to be fully registered with an official Kazakh entity and that 50 percent of the broadcasts of foreign channels consist of domestic content by 2018.

The Kazakh human rights organization Adil Soz, the National Association of Kazakh Broadcasters, and the NGO Internews-Kazakhstan wrote a letter to Nazarbaev requesting that he postpone adopting the law until after parliamentary elections scheduled for January 15.

The letter was signed by some 40 Kazakh media NGOs and it expressed concern about media restrictions within the draft law.

Dunja Mijatovic, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) representative on freedom of the media, also expressed concern about the legislation in a statement issued on December 28.

She said the draft law would violate the rights of citizens to freely receive and impart information and it increases state control over the electronic media.

The statement also noted that the recommendations made to the Kazakh government and parliament members by the OSCE and Kazakh civil society organizations during the last several months were not considered in the final writing of the legislation.

Mijatovic sent a letter to the Kazakh Foreign Ministry on December 12 in which she called on Nazarbaev to veto the draft law.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kazakh_senate_approves_controversial_broadcasting_law/24438533.html

Anticorruption Billboards Erected In Tajikistan

DUSHANBE — Huge billboards urging people to denounce corruption have been prominently placed in front of two Tajik universities this month, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

The billboards, in the capital, Dushanbe, depict two hands: one extended hand offering cash with another hand rejecting the apparent bribe by pushing the money back.

«We Say NO to Bribery in the Education Sector,» read the billboards, which appeared ahead of the winter exam season at Tajik universities.

The billboards were prepared by Tajikistan’s anticorruption agency along with the Dushanbe offices of the UN Development Fund and Britain’s Department for International Development.

Corruption is rampant in Tajikistan, and the country’s education sector is particularly notorious for its widespread bribery.

Several students at Tajikistan’s National University (TNU) told RFE/RL that some professors demand a bribe in order to pass a test and there is even a concrete price for each exam and test, ranging from 30 to 100 somonis (approximately $6-$20).

In a recent meeting with students at TNU, Education Minister Abdujabbor Rahmonov admitted that bribery exists in Tajik universities. But he blamed the students’ parents for the problem.

«It’s common knowledge which professors at which schools accept bribes,» Rahmonov said. «It wasn’t like this before. It’s the parents’ fault. I personally heard some of them saying they would agree to pay a bribe as long as their children pass their exams.»

TNU student Abubakr Mulloev told RFE/RL that he hopes the anticorruption billboards will prompt students and professors to think twice before giving or receiving bribes.

Mulloev said «many university professors — although not all of them — have let students know how much their exams and tests will cost.»

Tajikistan is ranked 152 in the 2011 Corruption Index of Transparency International, a body that annually ranks countries on their perceived levels of corruption.

http://www.rferl.org/content/anticorruption_billboards_erected_tajikistan/24438555.html