ADB Institute Opens Developing Asia Journalism Awards Competition

TOKYO (25 May 2010) — The Asian Development Bank Institute today opened the 2010 Developing Asia Journalism Awards (DAJA) competition with a call for submissions of articles by journalists working in developing Asia and the Pacific.
«The DAJA competition is a unique opportunity to highlight the significant contribution of journalism and individual journalists to the development process in Asia,» said Masahiro Kawai, Dean and CEO of the Asian Development Bank Institute, in opening the competition.
«Asian economies are changing rapidly,» he said. «By providing clear and well-informed news reporting and analysis journalists play an important role in every society by helping the public better understand the issues and events shaping their future.»
DAJA 2010 will focus on four themes expected to have long-term impacts on development trends in Asia and the Pacific: urbanization, environmental issues, rebalancing economic growth in the wake of the global financial crisis, and regional cooperation and integration.
In each area, the panel of international judges assessing submissions will give special focus to stories that investigate how these issues are impacting the lives of the poor — the 900 million Asians subsisting on less than $1.25 a day; the 1.8 billion living on less than $2 a day; and the hundreds of millions who do not have access to clean drinking water, adequate sanitation, or sufficient food to prevent malnutrition.
«The story of Asia is complex. In many areas there is rapid growth, impressive poverty reduction, and real improvements in standards of living. Elsewhere there remain tremendous needs and inequality. Asia has two faces, one shining and the other still dark,» said Mr. Kawai. «We hope the DAJA competition can explore this complexity through the work of journalists who are trying to understand and explain it better every day.»
Submission of articles will be accepted until 31 July 2010. The international panel of judges will review all submissions and select 20 finalists. Awards will be given in each theme category with special awards for «Development Journalist of the Year» and «Young Development Journalist of the Year» (under 30 years of age as of 31 July 2010).
Six cash prizes of $1,000 will be awarded to winning journalists in each of the four theme categories and each of the two special categories. All finalists will be invited to the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo in November 2010 for a special forum focusing on journalism and development issues, and the DAJA Awards ceremony.
All articles must be submitted under one of the following four categories:
1. Life in the City
In 2008 the world reached a tipping point: For the first time, more than half of all humans—some 3.3 billion people—now live in urban centers. «By 2030, this is expected to swell to almost 5 billion,» according to a recent United Nations Population Fund report. «Many of the new urbanites will be poor. Their future, the future of cities in developing countries, the future of humanity itself, all depend very much on decisions made now in preparation for this growth.»
• This category will accept articles examining the changes and challenges facing Asian cities, and the way individuals, civil society, local and national governments, and others are responding.
2. Going Green?
An «essential beginning» or «desperately disappointing»? The 2009 Copenhagen Summit on climate change brought 110 world leaders and thousands of delegates from 193 countries together in December 2009 to chart a common response to the threat of global warming. It failed to reach a legally binding treaty. But it did push greenhouse gas emissions, expanding carbon footprints, melting glaciers, and other environmental issues to the center of national debates around the globe.
• This category will accept articles on environmental issues: How is the environment affecting people and places in your country? What is being done to contain or reverse the problems? What needs to be done in future?
3. New Growth Paths
A key element of the global economic crisis was a collapse of demand in developed markets such as Europe and the United States. Exports to these markets have long been a critical component of growth in many Asian economies. Economists do not expect this demand to return to pre-crisis levels anytime soon. This means Asia must find new sources of demand and growth. To achieve sustainable growth countries will need to reorient their economies to expand domestic demand and trade with other Asian markets. This will require challenging and potentially controversial adjustments in many areas: improving infrastructure, expanding investment, managing national debt, improving the business climate, and others.
• This category will accept articles on actions and approaches to reorient economies to the new post-crisis reality. What policies are governments adopting? What are the implications and expectations of these changes? How are the changes affecting various stakeholders? How are these stakeholders reacting?
4. The Shape of Asia to Come
There are many ideas of what the Asia of the future will look like. Some believe Asian nations should continue along a gradual and «natural» road toward integrating their economies, allowing «markets» to lead the way while governments follow by providing public goods (transport and communication links, energy networks, etc.) as needed. Others believe governments should take more of a lead in providing official institutions to accelerate economic integration. Some dream of a pan-Asian economic community leading perhaps to a European-style «Community» in Asia with its own parliament, central bank, bureaucracy and possibly a common currency.
• This category will accept entries on what the Asia of the future might look like, and how the vision of an integrating Asia looks from one country to another. How do people in these countries view the idea of cooperation with their neighbors across national borders with freer flows of trade and investment, liberalized migration of labor and people? Whom do they see as their natural partners in Asia and do they think politicians are doing enough to realize closer cross-border cooperation? How do they view the prospect of one day being able to travel freely across Asia (and on to Europe or the Middle East) by rail or road links? Is there a sense of «Asian identity» developing in individual countries of the region? What are the advantages — and possible drawbacks — of regional cooperation?
If you are interested in participating in the 2010 DAJA program, please register online. When you have registered, you will be sent instructions by email of how to login to your account to submit articles.
For information on competition rules and mechanics, as well as information on how to submit articles, journalists should visit the ADB Institute web site: ADBI Journalism Awards.

Asian Development Bank

Tajik Court Sentences 36 For Membership In Banned Islamic Group

QURGHON-TEPPA, Tajikistan — A Tajik court has sentenced 36 people to prison for being followers of the banned Islamic group Jamaat ut-Tabligh, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Judge Ikromjon Abdulhafizov, in the southern Khatlon Province, said the court had proven the guilt of the 36 accused. He said 17 of them who were kept in detention since their arrest last fall received sentences of between five and 6 and 1/2 years. Nineteen others who were released on bail after their arrest will be jailed for three years.

The trial was held behind closed doors.

Faridoon Boboev, who was 17-years old when he allegedly joined the banned group, was released after he paid a fine of 2,500 somoni ($570).

Abdulhafizov noted that three other alleged followers of Jamaat ut-Tabligh received suspended sentences because they agreed to pay a 25,000 somoni ($5,700) fine.

The youngest person sentenced is 18 and the oldest is 63-years old.

Saivali Navruzov, the lawyer for 12 of the defendants, said their guilt was not proven and that he will appeal the sentences.

Janob Ashurov, who represented Nosir Rahimov, said he will not appeal Rahimov’s 6 and 1/2 year prison term. Ashurov said the prosecution did not produce any witnesses and the prosecution’s case was based on statements by the accused, who he said were forced to incriminate each other.

Rahimov’s relative, Ibrohim Boev, said Rahimov pleaded guilty because he hoped if he did the court would only fine and release him.

Khatlon Province Prosecutor Abdurahim Rahimov said that anyone who acts outside the principles enshrined in Tajikistan’s Constitution is an extremist.

But the leader of the Islamic Renaissance Party in Khatlon, Qalandar Sadriddinov, said that Jamaat ut-Tabligh has not done anything that violates the constitution and the accused were only were promoting Islamic values.

This was the second collective trial of members of Jamaat ut-Tabligh in Tajikistan. Last year 56 alleged members of the banned group were sentenced either to varying terms of imprisonment or a milder administrative punishment.

Jamaat ut-Tabligh was banned in Tajikistan in 2006.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajik_Court_Sentences_36_For_Membership_In_Banned_Islamic_Group_/204722

Tajik Officials Reverse Ban Against Mobile Phone Ads

DUSHANBE — Tajik industry and government officials say a government ban on mobile phone advertising in Dushanbe has been suspended, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Ghaffor Erkaev, head of the Association of Tajik Mobile Communication Companies, told RFE/RL on May 11 that Dushanbe officials have reversed their previous decision to remove advertisements for mobile phones from billboards in the Tajik capital.

Shuhrat Nematboev, the deputy head of Tajikistan’s State Committee on Investments, told RFE/RL that the decision by the Dushanbe Mayor’s Office to remove the billboards was hurting mobile phone companies’ business and had «spoiled their work environment.»

He said state lawyers are checking the legality of the billboard ban. Meanwhile, billboard advertisements for mobile phones are being restored in Dushanbe and the surrounding areas.

Erkaev said some officials misunderstood Tajik President Emomali Rahmon’s message when he spoke against the excessive use of mobile phones during his annual address to parliament last month. Rahmon said Tajikistan, with a population of 7 million, had 6 million mobile phone numbers.

He added that the annual profit of mobile companies is more than 1.4 billion somoni ($320 million), most of which, he said, goes to foreign companies. Rahmon also instructed Health Minister Nusratullo Salimov to start a television campaign explaining what Rahmon said was the «physical harm» mobile phones cause, especially to children.

Marina Rozhkina, a spokeswoman for the Russian-owned mobile phone company Bee-line, told RFE/RL in Dushanbe that mobile phone companies pay their taxes and have an active role in donating to charities and sponsoring sports teams.

Other major mobile phone operators in Tajikistan include the Tajik-American Babilon Mobile, Tajik-Russian company MLT, and Chinese-owned TK Mobile. The Indigo mobile phone company recently changed its name to TSL and sold 40 percent of its shares to the Agha Khan Foundation, with the rest being held by the Scandinavian company Telia Sonera.

Rahmon also criticized mobile phones during his annual address last year and told the Education Ministry to ban mobile phones from schools and universities.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajik_Officials_Reverse_Ban_Against_Mobile_Phone_Ads/2040338.html

Cyrillic Domain Names Become Operational On The Internet

It was a big day for Russian Internet users.

The first Internet domains using the Cyrillic script were launched on May 13 after Russia was officially assigned the .рф (.rf, for «Russian Federation») domain by the global Internet governing body.

Representatives of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) handed Russia its Cyrillic domain administration certificate at an Internet forum that kicked off in Moscow.

The arrival of Cyrillic on the Internet, where Latin characters have long held a monopoly, follows a similar switch last week, when websites in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates began using Arabic script in their web addresses.

ICANN chief executive Rod Beckstrom said the new native-script domains will help make the World Wide Web even more global.

«It’s a very big move. The Internet’s been around roughly for four decades, and this is the first time that domain names are opening up to people’s native tongues and scripts,» Beckstrom says. «So for the many people in the world that speak Cyrillic, or Arabic-based languages or Chinese-based languages, this is very significant, and Russia is a very important part of ICANN, which is a global organization. So we are very excited to see this happening.»

Igor Shchyogolev, Russia’s minister of communications and mass media, was among the top officials who came to the forum to hail what many have already described as a «birth certificate» for Cyrillic Internet domains.

Shchyogolev told the forum that the changes mark the end of the Latin script’s domination of the Internet — although certain challenges remain.

«The wonderful little character @, which is used to write all Internet addresses, does not exist on the Russian keyboard,» Shchyogolev notes. «To type this character, users have to switch their keyboard from Cyrillic to Latin. This is a detail, but it shows that we have so far been oriented toward the Latin script.»

Paving The Way

ICANN approved the use of non-Latin characters in Internet domain names last autumn. According to ICANN, more than half of the world’s 1.6 billion Internet users speak a native language that is not written with the Latin alphabet.

In Russia, only two Cyrillic addresses were launched today: президент.рф and правительство.рф, the web sites of the country’s president and government.

Gradually, more and more web address holders will be able to «Russify» their domains (including the site of RFE/RL’s Russian Service).

Following private companies, media outlets, and political parties, ordinary users will be able to register for domains in Cyrillic starting October 1.

President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, both self-professed Internet buffs, have actively lobbied for the introduction of Cyrillic domains in Russia.

Supporters say the changes will make the Internet more accessible to Russians who feel intimidated by the Latin script. The Cyrillic web addresses, they say, will also help boost web use in the provinces, which still lag far behind big cities in terms of Internet penetration.

More than 30 million Russians are regular Internet users, out of a total population of some 140 million, and the country has the fastest-growing Internet community in Europe.

‘Massive Audience’

Aleksandr Amzin, an Internet expert at the online news agency Lenta.ru, predicts that Cyrillic domains will prove a success.

«The Russian Internet represents a massive audience, an audience that does not necessarily know English or the Latin alphabet, and for whom it is much simpler to write in Russian than in English,» he tells RFE/RL. «For businesses, it’s not a bad thing either.»

But some web users talk of Internet «separatism» and are worried that the changes will create a segregated, hermetic Russian web and undermine the Internet’s global spirit.

Critics fear that the new domains could encourage Russian authorities to follow China’s example and introduce Internet censorship.

Another concern is the likely rise in cyberfraud. Some companies say they will be forced to acquire a .рф sister domain in order to prevent so-called cybersquatters from taking over the Cyrillic domains and harming their business.

«For cybersquatters, this is heaven,» Amzin says. «Russia already had two domain types — .ru and .su, which stands for Soviet Union. Now we have three. Those who want to protect themselves from fraudsters will now have to register at .ru, .su, and .рф.»

Claire Bigg, Radio Liberty

Источник: Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Authorities expelled journalists from SCO session

On 14 May, during the Fifth Forum of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), at Strategic Research Center in Dushanbe, eight journalists representing local and foreign media were asked to leave the place.

Vafo Niyatbekov, representative of the Strategic Research Center, explained that the journalists can meet participants of the Forum at the end of the session and collect copies of presentations, but they are not allowed to stay in the conference room during the day.

The journalists had to obey in order not to compromise Tajikistan’s image before the foreign participants.

It should be noted that the journalists were attending the second session of the Forum, where participants discussed the issues of cultural and international cooperation, and the information presented there had nothing to do with security data.

NANSMIT monitoring service

Tajik President Puts State Body In Charge Of Religious Affairs

DUSHANBE — Tajik President Emomali Rahmon has reinstated the State Committee on Religious Affairs to oversee the country’s religious organizations, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Rahmon appointed Abdurahim Kholiqov on May 12 to lead the committee, which will take over duties previously carried out by the Culture Ministry. Kholiqov previously worked as an official in Rahmon’s administration.

Tajik religious-affairs analyst Saidahmad Qalandar told RFE/RL that the control and regulation of religious organizations in the country has become increasingly important, which is why the duty has been removed from the Culture Ministry and given to a specific body.

Saidibrohim Nazar, an activist in the Islamic Renaissance Party, agreed that the committee is important in regulating religious affairs, but he said Kholiqov is not a well-known person in this regard.

The Culture Ministry’s directorate of religious affairs, which previously controlled matters of faith in Tajikistan, had responsibilities including sending people on the annual hajj, the registration of mosques and churches, and regulating the import of religious literature.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajik_President_Puts_State_Body_In_Charge_Of_Religious_Affairs/2040655.

Iran Offers To Mediate Between Tajikistan, Uzbekistan

DUSHANBE — Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi said in Dushanbe today that Iran is ready to try to alleviate tensions between Tajikistan and Uzbekistan at their request, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reported.

Vahidi, who is on a two-day official visit to Tajikistan, identified Dushanbe’s commitment to completing construction of the Roghun hydroelectic power station as a point of contention between Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

Uzbek officials have strongly protested the Roghun project as taking too much water away from Uzbekistan, which needs it for agricultural use.

Vahidi said Tajikistan and Uzbekistan should try to improve bilateral relations as regional development is contingent on cooperation between all regional states.

He acknowledged that Tajikistan’s water resources could enable it to generate electricity for export to neighboring countries. He is scheduled to visit the Sangtuda-2 hydroelectric power station that is under construction in southern Tajikistan. Iran is financing that project.

Vahidi met in Dushanbe today with Tajik President Emomali Rahmon and his Tajik counterpart, Colonel General Sherali Khayrulloyev. He described military cooperation between Iran and Tajikistan as satisfactory, adding that unspecified new developments in bilateral relations provide an opportunity to activate unused potential.

Noting persistent instability in Afghanistan, Vahidi advocated three-way cooperation between Iran, Tajikistan, and Afghanistan in combating drug trafficking and terrorism.

Military cooperation between Tajikistan and Iran began in 1997. Iran has offered scholarships for Tajik officers to study at Iranian military
universities and also helped Tajikistan to build a factory that makes military uniforms.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Iran_Offers_To_Mediate_Between_Tajikistan_Uzbekistan/2041410.html

Prosecutor forfeited journalist’s ID

Juma Tolib, chief editor of the Paikon weekly published an article (#18, 05.05.2010) telling a story about Jakhongir Akhmedov, deputy prosecutor in the city of Chkalovsk who illegally took identification card from him.

The reason for conflict was Tolib’s “behavior” – the journalist was walking along the lake, taking pictures, and saw a dead body being pulled out of the water. Having shown his identification card to the police officers, the journalist asked some questions, but instead of getting answers, he was brought to the prosecutor’s office.

After the tedious waiting, the journalists was requested to write an explanation note indicating the purpose of having the photo camera. Tolib told the NANSMIT monitoring service that he managed to cope with the situation, but any young and inexperienced journalist would hardly be able to communicate with the arrogant representatives of the law enforcement agencies.

NANSMIT monitoring service

Dushanbe Campaign Against Mobile Phone Ads Draws Fire

A Tajik communications official has complained about the removal of mobile phone advertisements from billboards in Dushanbe, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Ghaffor Erkaev, the head of the Association of Tajik Mobile Communication Companies, told RFE/RL that although advertisements for tobacco and alcohol are illegal in Tajikistan, there is no ban on mobile phone advertisements.

The removal of the billboards was ordered earlier this month by the office of Dushanbe Mayor Mahmadsaid Ubaidulloev.

Erkaev said all the advertisements were prepaid and that the billboard business is beneficial to mobile phone companies and advertising agencies.

He said the billboard removal had come as a surprise.

Last month in his annual address to parliament, President Emomali Rahmon said Tajikistan, with a population of 7 million, had 6 million mobile phone numbers and 500,000 Internet users.

According to Rahmon, the annual profit of mobile companies is more than 1.4 billion somoni ($320 million), most of which he said goes to foreign companies.

Rahmon also instructed Health Minister Nusratullo Salimov to start a television campaign explaining what Rahmon said was the harm mobile phones cause to people, especially children.

Economist Masud Sobirov said that removing the billboards will not hurt mobile phone providers much because they have a good base for their development and should be able to find other ways to advertise their services.

But some experts say mobile phones have become an important tool for the spread of information and that is why authorities are putting the industry under pressure.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Dushanbe_Campaign_Against_Mobile_Phone_Ads_Draws_Fire/2033337.html

Tajik Media Alliance Is Planning A Street Action In Dushanbe

The Media Alliance of Tajikistan (MAT) is planning to run a number of public events on the occasion of the World Press Freedom Day celebrated on 3 May.

According to Zafar Abdullaev, secretary of MAT, the Alliance will conduct a theatrical show and an award ceremony for Tajik journalists who achieved significant results in their profession.

Tajik media professionals will also commemorate their colleagues who were killed in the line of duty during the protracted civil war in the 1990-s.

The Alliance has “established” a special “anti-award” to the government agency, which was the “most closed” for journalists and impeded their professional activities.

The Media Alliance of Tajikistan is the biggest media agency comprising printing, electronic, online outlets and information agencies.

In 1993 the United Nations General Assembly acclaimed the 3 of May the World Press Freedom Day. This day is the annual reminder to the global community that the freedom of speech and the free expression of thoughts are the basic rights stated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

www.avesta.tj

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