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Sixty-Six Journalists Killed In ‘Barbaric’ Year

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) says attacks on journalists are becoming “more and more barbaric” and the number of abductions is “growing rapidly.”

In its annual report released on December 16, the Paris-based group says 66 reporters have been killed in connection to their work over the past year, down 7 percent on 2013 thanks largely to fewer deaths in countries «at peace.»

But it also says the beheading of James Foley and Steven Sotloff by the Islamic State extremist group in Syria highlights the danger journalists face in covering conflicts.

RSF says the report highlights “an evolution in the nature of violence against journalists and the way certain kinds, including carefully staged threats and beheadings, are being used for very clear purposes.»

«Rarely have reporters been murdered with such a barbaric sense of propaganda, shocking the entire world,» it adds.

The report found that the deadliest country for journalists was Syria, where 15 were killed, followed by the Palestinian territories (7), Ukraine (6), Iraq (4), and Libya (4).

Three journalists were killed in Afghanistan, two in Pakistan (2), and one in Russia.

Kidnappings

Meanwhile, kidnappings rose 37 percent to 119 in the past year.

Thirty-three of them were abducted in Ukraine, where pro-government forces have been battling pro-Russian separatists since April, 29 in Libya, and 27 in Syria.

About 40 journalists are still being held hostage worldwide.

According to the report, 90 percent of those abducted were local journalists.

For instance, all of the eight journalists currently held hostage in Iraq are Iraqis.

Worldwide, a total of 178 professional journalists were in prison as of December 8, the same number, as last year.

China is the country where most journalists were jailed in the past year (29), followed by Eritrea (28), Iran (19), Egypt (16), and Syria (13).

Ten journalists were imprisoned in Uzbekistan and Azerbaijan, and four in Russia.

The report describes Azerbaijan as «Europe’s biggest prison for media personnel» and highlights the case of Khadija Ismayilova, an investigative journalist and contributor to RFE/RL who is in pretrial detention.

«Now she is being held on the absurd charge of ‘pushing’ a former colleague to attempt suicide, a charge that carries a possible sentence of three to seven years in jail,» it says.

Due to conflicts and «diverse forms of intimidation,» RWB says, twice as many journalists fled into exile this year, as in 2013.

With reporting by Reuters and AFP

http://www.rferl.org/content/rsf-journalists-killed-in-barbaric-year/26746230.html

Two Suspects In Attack On Siberian Journalist Detained

Police in the Russian city of Novosibirsk have detained two men suspected of attacking a local journalist.

The chief editor of online news site Tayga.info, Yevgeny Mezdrikov, said earlier that two men entered his offices on December 8 and punched him in the face several times with no explanation.

Vladimir Gorodetsky, the Siberian region’s governor, told journalists on December 15 that two suspects had been detained on December 12.

The Novosibirsk Journalists Union had urged regional law enforcement officials to investigate, expressing concerns over frequent attacks against journalists in the region.

Advocacy groups say attack on journalists whose work challenges or displeases the authorities in Russia face daily risks and their attackers are rarely punished.

Tayga.info is a private, independent media outlet that has been covering news and events in the region since 2004.

Based on reporting by Tayga.info, TASS, and Interfax

http://www.rferl.org/content/two-suspects-detained-attack-novosibirsk-journalist/26744509.html

Jailed Azerbaijani Journalist Khadija Ismayilova’s ‘Letter Of Hope’ For 2015

Award-winning Azerbaijani investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who hosts a daily program for RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service, has been held in pretrial detention in Baku since December 5 after being accused of encouraging a man to commit suicide — a charge that has been broadly condemned as a flagrant attempt to silence her critical voice.

She is widely perceived to have often been the target of harassment and intimidation by the Azerbaijani government and pro-government forces for months because of her groundbreaking investigations into corruption at the highest levels of power, including President Ilham Aliyev and his family.

Ismayilova was able to send this brief note from jail to RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service.

The letter has been edited for style and grammar.

My dear friends!

Here in pretrial detention, my thoughts are with you. My only regret is that here I am restricted from helping you.

You are doing an important job helping oppressed people. Happy New Year to you and all like-minded people.

A photo of Khadija Ismayilova's letter from Kurakhani prison (click to enlarge)A photo of Khadija Ismayilova’s letter from Kurakhani prison (click to enlarge)

I am full of hope on the eve of this New Year that truth and justice will win.

Arrests and restrictions are part of our mission in telling the truth. My arrest proves one more time that it is important to make change happen: We need to build a new reality where truth will be a norm of life and telling the truth will not require courage.

You all know why I am here in prison. Uncovering corruption is the real reason. And the only way to prove oppressive regimes wrong is to continue uncovering corruption, to continue defending the rights of oppressed people. Yes, there is a price to pay. But it is worth it!

As Nazim Hikmet, the Turkish poet, wrote: «Those who carry the teardrops of their siblings as a heavy burden upon their neck shouldn’t follow our path.»

Stay strong!

Keep doing a good job!

More investigations, more efforts for justice and human rights — this is my wish for 2015.

Peace,
Khadija

http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-khadija-letter-hope/26742183.html

Central Asia: Draft amendments to the legislation regulating the activities of NGOs should guarantee freedom of association

On International Human Rights Day, ARTICLE 19 and our Central Asian partners — International Foundation for Protection of Freedom of Speech (Adil Soz), National Association of Independent Mass Media of Tajikistan (NANSMIT) and Media Policy Institute (MPI) — remind the governments of Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan of their obligation to protect the right to freedom of association. This is enshrined in Article 22 of the ICCPR, to which all three states are party. We therefore call on these governments to abandon amendments to their legislation, whether already proposed or currently being drafted, which attempt to restrict how non-governmental organisations (NGOs) operate. Читать далее Central Asia: Draft amendments to the legislation regulating the activities of NGOs should guarantee freedom of association

Kyrgyz Civil Leaders Urge President Not To Pressure NGOs

By RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service

BISHKEK — The leaders of 43 nongovernmental organizations in Kyrgyzstan have urged President Almazbek Atambaev not to put pressure on NGOs.

A letter addressed to Atambaev on December 8 urges him «not to repeat the mistakes of his predecessors.»

The NGO leaders were referring to a television interview on December 1 in which Atambaev said some NGO activities may «pose a threat» to national security.

The letter says «two previous presidents who said that NGOs threaten Kyrgyzstan’s national security were threatening national security themselves, and as a result were kicked out of the country.»

Kyrgyz revolutions in 2005 and 2010 ousted Presidents Askar Akaev and Kurmanbek Bakiev, respectively.

Parliament is considering a controversial bill that would impose «foreign-agent» status on NGOs receiving foreign funds.

Critics say the bill mimics a 2012 law in Russia that was heavily criticized by rights groups and Western governments.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kyrgyz-civil-leaders-urge-president-not-to-pressure-ngos/26731254.html

We Speak English: Tajik TV Stops Dubbing Hollywood Films

By Zarangez Navruzshoh

December 07, 2014

Mehrangez is a university student in Dushanbe who says she has few opportunities to talk with native English speakers. So she didn’t expect to understand much when she watched «The Great Gatsby» recently on Tajik television.

And she was right. Now that state broadcasters no longer voiceover or dub many of the English-language movies they show, Mehrangez had a difficult time following the dialogue.

«I only understood two words,» she says. «They were ‘hello’ and ‘madame.'»

Still, she watched the film to the end, convinced that one day she will be able to understand English-only movies as easily as she and most other Tajiks understand Russian-language movies today.

«I already have watched many American films [on Tajik TV], and the one which I think is the best of all is ‘The Great Gatsby,’ the new film,» she says. «I think [watching] English films, American films can improve our English.»

Tajik state television began airing English-language films in their original versions just a few months ago. But with three channels now showing Hollywood and Bollywood films without any translation help on Sundays and Thursdays, the films are already carving out a space for English in Tajik life that it has never occupied before.

Komro Safarov, the deputy head of the country’s First Channel, says the new initiative is based on the idea that young Tajiks of earlier generations learned Russian precisely because films in that language were not translated when they were broadcast across the Soviet Union.

Now, as the number of people in the country who want to learn English increases, giving them the opportunity to hear English the same way should greatly accelerate their progress, Safarov says.

«It is through watching and hearing people speak that one accelerates the learning process for a foreign language,» he says.

Two other state channels — «Safina» and «Bahoristan» — are also now showing English-only films two days a week.

Parvon Jamshed, the chairman of Tajikistan’s Association of Teachers, says only 5 percent of the population speaks English today.

Still, interest among many young people is high. This year 1,000 Tajik secondary school students applied through the U.S. Congress-sponsored Future Leaders Exchange (FLEX) program to study for one year at a high school in the United States. One hundred of the applicants were accepted.

The interest in English in Tajikistan has already created a boom in English-language courses in state schools and in private training centers. But Jamshed says that what has been missing until now is any integration of English into the Central Asian country’s public life.

«Currently, there are a lot of language centers and most institutions of higher education include study of the English language,» he notes. «But because few people ever communicate in English, the only way for them to develop their fluency is viewing movies.»

Ironically, most foreign movies shown on Tajik television today are dubbed or voiced over into Russian, because they come to Tajikistan via the Russian market. The translation causes no concerns because Russian has been the country’s second language for more than a century and remains widely understood.

However, Tajik President Emomali Rahmon has said that every citizen of the country should know both English and Russian, as well as their mother tongue.

The initiative to begin broadcasting English-only films came direct from the presidential office, Safarov says.

The heads of state television have announced that they will increase the broadcasting hours for original-version movies in both English and Russian in the future, though they have yet to provide further details.

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajikistan-film-industry-dubbing-english/26730066.html

Watchdog Says World Internet Freedom In Decline

A U.S.-based rights watchdog says Internet freedom around the world has deteriorated for the fourth consecutive year, with the steepest declines in Russia, Ukraine, and Turkey.

In its «Freedom On The Net 2014» report, released on December 4, Freedom House says that Iran, Syria, and China are the world’s worst abusers of overall Internet freedom.

The report, which covers the period between May 2013 and May 2014, assesses the level of Internet and digital-media freedom in 65 countries, with each receiving a score from 0 for the most free to 100 for the least free.

It says that of the 65 countries assessed, 36 have experienced negative trends since May 2013.

Based on the scores, the report ranks countries as free (0-30 points), partly free (31-60 points), or not free (61-100 points).

INFOGRAPHIC: World Map Of Internet Freedom

Of the countries in RFE/RL’s broadcast area that are covered by the report, only two are ranked as free: Georgia, with 26 points; and Armenia, with 28 points.

Ukraine (33 points), Kyrgyzstan (34), Azerbaijan (55), Russia (60), and Kazakhstan (60) are among countries in the «partly free» category.

The report says that Russia’s score fell by 11 points over the past five years. It says that since Vladimir Putin’s return to the presidency in 2012, authorities have implemented legislation to block online content, critical or opposition media outlets, and mentions Putin’s signing a bill authorizing the blocking — without judicial oversight — of any website that hosts content deemed as «extremist» or calls to protest.

The Freedom House paper says the bill, which became effective in February, was used to crack down on websites critical of Russia’s actions in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s ranking declined five points, mostly because of violence targeting social media and online journalism during the Euromaidan protests, and additional evidence revealing that ousted President Viktor Yanukovych’s government had been keeping activists, journalists, and political opponents under Internet surveillance.

The report mentions Azerbajian’s moves to expand criminal defamation to Internet content, further muzzling government criticism. It notes the case of Khadija Ismayilova, a journalist for RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service, who has repeatedly been subjected to blackmail and gender-based smear campaigns.

Iran (89), Uzbekistan (79), Pakistan (69), and Belarus (62) are states where the Internet is not free.

The paper says that Iran remains the worst country in the world for Internet freedom, despite initial hopes over the election of reformist President Hassan Rohani. It says the government continued to hand down harsh punishments, sentencing people to lengthy jail terms for promoting Sufism online, among other online activities.

In Pakistan’s case, it mentions the case of a woman who was stoned to death by local men in June 2013 after a tribal court found her guilty of possessing a mobile phone.

The report notes an improvement in Belarus, where authorities eased enforcement of some restrictions, but mentions the case of a blogger who exposed police corruption and was subsequently harassed and forced to undergo a psychiatric evaluation.

The report says that, from May 2013 to May 2014, some 41 countries adopted or proposed laws to penalize free speech online, step up control over Internet content, or expand Internet surveillance.

The United States, while ranked the sixth-most-free country in terms of internet use, saw a two-point decline over the past year.

But the report says that efforts to reform U.S. surveillance legislation gained momentum in the aftermath of revelations by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

http://www.rferl.org/content/internet-freedom-in-decline/26724869.html

Journalism master’s program offers scholarships

Students who wish to pursue a graduate degree in journalism can apply for a scholarship.

The Erasmus Mundus Master’s in Journalism, Media and Globalisation welcomes applications from graduate students around the world. Students spend their first year studying at Aarhus University in Denmark. They spend their second year studying at a different European partner university: University of Amsterdam, City University London, University of Hamburg or Swansea University.

Students also have an opportunity to study at a non-European university during the second semester of their first year. The non-European partner universities are University of California at Berkeley, University of Technology Sydney and Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile.

The Mundus Journalism Consortium is able to offer a limited number of student scholarships. The scholarships are divided in two categories. Category A scholarships are worth EUR48,000 (US$60,206) and are available to students from non-European Union countries. Category B scholarships are worth EUR23,000 (US$28,849) and are available to students who do not fulfill the requirements to apply for Category A.

Proficiency in English is required to apply to the program.

The deadline to apply is Jan. 10, 2015.

For more information, click here: http://mundusjournalism.com/admissions

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