International Media Support Is Seeking a Programme Manager to manage media projects in Tajikistan

From October 2011 the international media NGO, International Media Support, will run a two and a half year programme in Tajikistan with various media projects focussing on support and professionalization of media, youth and media, capacity building of local media organizations and coordination of media activities with other international media NGOs.

International Media Support (IMS) seeks a Programme Manager to manage these media projects and to react to sudden future needs in the media environment of Tajikistan.

The Programme Manager must live in Tajikistan and work from there in close collaboration with local partners and IMS head quarters in Denmark, Department for Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia.

The Programme Manager is expected to work closely together with IMS’ local umbrella partner, NANSMIT and work from the office of NANSMIT.

The IMS Programme Manager in Tajikistan will be responsible for the IMS projects in Tajikistan, including the following tasks:

1. To become completely familiarized with the IMS projects in Tajikistan, budget, objectives, results and the time-frame in which the projects will take place (grant-administration and project cycle management).

2. To locally manage and coordinate all IMS projects in Tajikistan in close cooperation with IMS’ local partners and to assess sudden needs of IMS involvement in non-planned activities.

3. To make sure, that all IMS projects are carried out professionally, efficient and at reasonable economic costs in accordance with the budget-lines allocated.

4. To monitor the results of the IMS projects in Tajikistan in accordance with the planned outputs.

5. To support the project management of NANSMIT (the umbrella partner of IMS in Tajikistan) and to monitor the results of the projects led by NANSMIT on behalf of IMS.

6. To function as a communication link and coordinator between IMS and relevant local and international media/development organisations located in Tajikistan.

7. To manage the project budgets and to pay local staff who are working for IMS (e.g. short term experts).

8. To closely follow and monitor the media development in Tajikistan and to follow and monitor the overall political situation in the country (to the extent needed for media-development purposes).

9. To deliver qualified written input on the political development, the media development and the IMS projects in Tajikistan every half year for bi-annual reports to IMS’ back-donor and/or to report to IMS on the above listed tasks when required and needed.

10.To participate in a Skype meeting every 2nd week with IMS HQ.

Qualifications of the programme officer:

1. Relevant educational background (in journalism, international relations, communications, politics, business, business administration, cultural studies, or similar academic studies).

2. Preferably at least 3 years of professional experience in development assistance.

3. Preferably documented experience with project management.

4. Interest in and knowledge about media.

5. Knowledge about Tajik and Central Asian politics – and a sensitive flair of the present political development and potential conflicts.

6. Neutral, fair and balanced regarding possible political, religious and social conflicts in Tajikistan.

7. Extensive communicative and cooperative skills.

8. Extensive network in the Tajik society.

9. Efficient, constructive and solution oriented.

10. Preferably experience with or from CIS countries.

11. Fluent in Tajik and English and knowledge of Russian.

The salary will be negotiated according to qualifications.

The start of the job is preferably October 2011.

The work place will be at the office of NANSMIT: 34, Huseinzoda str, Dushanbe city, Tajikistan

Deadline for applications: September 20 2011.

More information about the job at:

NANSMIT: Nurridin Karshiboev, phone: (+992 37) 221-37-11, (992 93) 504 30 13(mobile), e-mail: knuriddin@yandex.ru , or at Henrik Hansen, International Media Support (hkh@i-m-s.dk or skype: henrikkeith)

www.nansmit.tj

IMS is seeking a Program Manager in Tajikistan

International Media Support Is Seeking a Program Manager to manage media projects in Tajikistan.

From October 2011 the international media NGO, International Media Support, will run a two and a half year program in Tajikistan with various media projects focusing on support and professionalization of media, youth and media, capacity building of local media organizations and coordination of media activities with other international media NGOs.

International Media Support (IMS) seeks a Programme Manager to manage these media projects and to react to sudden future needs in the media environment of Tajikistan.

The Program Manager must live in Tajikistan and work from there in close collaboration with local partners and IMS head quarters in Denmark, Department for Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia.

The Program Manager is expected to work closely together with IMS’ local umbrella partner, NANSMIT and work from the office of NANSMIT.

For more information click here: [url=http://www.eng.nansmit.tj/?page=events&id=4]http://www.eng.nansmit.tj/?page=events&id=4[/url]

EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES CALLS FOR AN INVESTIGATION INTO ALLEGED COURTROOM THREATS

Dushanbe, Tajikistan, August 26, 2011

The Embassy of the United States of America is concerned with alleged threats made by an officer of the Ministry of Internal Affairs’ (MVD) Department for Combating Organized Crime against lawyers representing Asia-Plus.

If true, this type of action has no place in a court of law, and the incident must be investigated to preserve the integrity of the legal system.

We view the announcement by the MVD that it has launched an internal investigation as a positive step.

We urge the Office of the Prosecutor to view the allegations seriously, investigate them thoroughly, and take appropriate action based upon the results of the investigation.

http://dushanbe.usembassy.gov/

Tajik Officials ‘Admit Irregularities’ During Arrest Of BBC Journalist

KHUJAND, Tajikistan — Lawyers for a BBC journalist on trial in Tajikistan on charges of associating with a banned Islamic group say officials have acknowledged there were procedural violations during his arrest and detention, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Urunboy Usmonov, 59, was arrested in June and went on trial last week over his alleged links to Hizb ut-Tahrir.

Usmonov and his employer have denied any wrongdoing, saying any meetings he had with the group members were for purely journalistic purposes.

Usmonov’s lawyers quoted Khurshed Ghiyosov, head of the State Committee for National Security investigations department in Sughd Province, as saying on August 26 that Usmonov should have been provided with a lawyer immediately after his arrest, and a search of his home was not legal.

Usmonov’s wife, Malohat Abduazimova, who was invited to attend the court hearing, said that when security officers brought Usmonov with them on June 14 to search the family home there were visible signs of a beating on his head and face.

But representatives of the investigation team categorically deny beating Usmonov. They said that when Usmonov was freed from detention on July 14, he gave them a written statement that he was not beaten at the time of his arrest.

Usmonov’s lawyer Fayzinso Vohidova said he wrote that statement word by word under pressure from the prosecutors’ office simply to secure his release from detention. Vohidova claimed that investigators did not allow Usmonov to meet with his lawyers for nine days after his arrest, until the marks from the beating had disappeared.

Vohidova said the group of security agents who arrested Usmonov and searched his home acted illegally, because under Tajik law this is the task of investigators. For that reason, Vohidova said, the materials the security agents took from Usmonov’s home could not be used as evidence during his trial.

Usmonov and four other defendants face substantial fines or jail terms of up to five years, or both, if convicted.

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajik_officials_admit_irregularities_during_bbc_arrest/24309444.html

Uzbekistan Launches Its Own Facebook, Except It’s Not For Everyone

Ever since social networks have come under greater scrutiny for their role in the Arab Spring — and indeed in the U.K. riots — repressive governments have been scrambling to find ways to rein in the unruly kids and their social networks.

Shutdowns aren’t always good things (except in times of crisis) as they generate bad headlines, so instead there has been a push from some governments to create their own sanitized networks. A new social network called Muloqot is being launched in Uzbekistan in conjunction with the state telecom monopoly. Muloqot can be translated as “dialogue” or “conversation”.

This from the Central Asia Newswire:

The Muloqot (“Dialogue”) web site will be available starting September 1, to coincide with the country’s 20th anniversary of independence.

The social network “will create conditions…for the formation of high morals, for creation of spurs to successful development of modern knowledge and achievements of technical progress, with objective of realization of the idea of the comprehensively developed person,” BBC News on Friday reported Uzbek authorities as saying.

In recent years, many young Uzbeks have gravitated toward global social networks, such as Facebook or Odnoklassniki. A reported 350,000-400,000 people a day use Odnoklassniki, whereas 85,000 people in Uzbekistan have signed up for Facebook, which has become a place where Uzbek opposition and human rights groups are active.

So how will Muloqot work? To register you need an Uzbek mobile phone number (so fewer interfering foreigners). The service, which is in the Uzbek and Russian languages, then sends you a text message, which you have three days to respond to, otherwise your account will be deleted.

The usability is clean, easy to navigate, and with all the usual social-networking functionality: messaging, chat, pictures, music uploads etc. With over half of Uzbekistan’s 7.7 million Internet users accessing through cell phones, the site is well-optimized for mobile.

Colleagues in RFE/RL’s Uzbek Service managed to register on the first day and post RFE/RL content (blocked in Uzbekistan) to a general Wall (at that point there were only about 400 users). Within 15 minutes, however, their profiles were deleted. Another RFE/RL staffer posted some comments praising the president’s daughter, Gulnara Karimova, and their profile has remained active.

But is it likely to catch on? A week after what seems to be a soft launch it has 1,700 users. Even in democracies, it’s not always easy to get young people to sign on to government-led projects, especially when they know they will be under the watchful eyes of the authorities.

But as the director of RFE/RL’s Uzbek Service, Alisher Sidikov, points out, one advantage Muloqot will have is that it benefits from the state telecom monopoly. Sidikov says the authorities can attract users with free, fast services, including generous email storage and music and movies download. Above all, with the site’s sleek design and easy-to-use navigation, it looks like the government above all has understood that it needs to be competitive.

It is another manifestation of a broad trend I have followed on Tangled Web: the attempt to enclose the global commons of the Internet, often under the guise of protecting the moral health of the nation’s youth. (Some background in this post, “Cyber-Westphalia And Its Disruptors”)

There are plenty of precedents for what the Uzbek government is trying to do here. China is the gold standard in offering state-sponsored local-language social-networking services. Last year, the Vietnamese authorities followed suit and tried a similar thing with go.vn, a government-sponsored alternative to Facebook, the only catch being that users have to log in with their full names and government-issued identity numbers.

Iran is more explicitly linking the greater controls with a moral crusade by attempting to set up a “Halal Internet,” supposedly a sanitized worldwide network with content adhering to Islamic principles. The purity of Islam is probably the least of their worries here, but rather their perception of the dangers of what they see as the American-led, Twitter-powered Arab Spring.

What most worries activists in Uzbekistan, though, is that the launch of Muloqot is merely a prelude to a ban of Facebook, which represents the global connected society the Karimov regime is so afraid of. If there was such a ban, the Uzbek authorities would hope that instead of dealing with thousands of angry social-media-starved young people, they would all just pipe down and head on over to Muloqot.

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/uzbekistan_launches_its_own_facebook_except_its_not_for_everyone/243089

RFE/RL Kazakh Reporter, Activist, Sued For Libel

AQTOBE, Kazakhstan — A rights activist and RFE/RL correspondent in Kazakhstan is being sued for libel after she alleged children at a special needs school were being abused, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

Alima Abdirova is due to appear in court in the western city of Aqtobe on August 27 after the former director of the school took legal action.

Abdirova is being sued as a member of the independent Kazakh Bureau for Human Rights group, and not as a journalist.

The case centers on comments Abdirova made in an article published in a local newspaper in May, where she said children at the Aqtobe boarding school were subject to beatings and neglect.

Irina Dombrovskaya, the school’s former director, says Abdirova’s comments unfairly portrayed the situation. She is demanding 5 million tenge (some $34,000) for moral damages and 60,000 tenge (some $400) for court costs. Abdirova could also face up to three years in prison if convicted.

Abdirova said the court has ignored the testimony of some witnesses, including that of a former student who alleged violence and other abuses at the school

Abdirova recently has been reporting on security problems in western Kazakhstan where there was a suicide bombing and a clash between security forces and alleged Islamic militants earlier this year.

A regional television station reported on the alleged Islamic militants and showed a photograph of Abdirova with the caption «accomplice» on the screen.

Abdirova said she believes the libel case against her is retaliation by the state security committee (KNB) for her coverage.

http://www.rferl.org/content/rferl_kazakh_reporter_sued_for_libel/24308854.html

Tajikistan: BBC journalist Urunboy Usmonov on trial for his professional activities

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PUBLIC STATEMENT

24 August 2011
Index: EUR 60/008/2011

Tajikistan: BBC journalist Urunboy Usmonov on trial for his professional activities

Amnesty International is concerned that BBC journalist Urunboy Usmonov faces up to five years’ imprisonment on charges believed to relate to his professional activities. To the organization’s knowledge, no investigation has yet been carried out into allegations that he was tortured and ill-treated in pre-trial detention. The judge has reportedly yet to inquire into how he and his four co-defendants have been treated in pre-trial detention.

On 16 August 2011 the trial by Soghd Regional Court opened against Urunboy Usmonov and four suspected Hizb-ut-Tahrir members — Abdunabi Abdulkodirov, Ibrogimbek Makhmudov, Talat Mavlonov and Yakhekhon Rakhmonkhujaev — at the investigation isolation prison No. 2 (SIZO) in the city of Khujand. The next hearing is set for 25 August in the building of Soghd Regional Court. It is expected that those officers who detained Urunboy Usmonov on 13 June will be questioned.

Urunboy Usmonov is accused of meeting these four men and receiving extremist literature; failing to report the activities of the banned Hizb-ut-Tahrir movement to law enforcement agencies; and using the BBC as a platform for Hizb-ut-Tahrir propaganda, thereby facilitating the commitment of crimes. His lawyer Fayziniso Vahidova told Amnesty International on 24 August that he once met Yakhekhon Rakhmonkhujaev and received Hizb-ut-Tahrir literature from him, but that he destroyed it immediately. According to Fayziniso Vahidova, he had never seen any of the other men and they also told the judge they had never seen him. Yakhekhon Rakhmonkhujaev reportedly told the judge that during his meeting with Urunboy Usmonov the journalist had expressed a negative opinion about Hizb-ut-Tahrir.

The lawyer also informed Amnesty International that the accusation that he had used the BBC as a platform for Hizb-ut-Tahrir propaganda referred to an incident when “Usmonov recorded an interview with a Hizb-ut-Tahrir member. But he never actually submitted this interview for broadcasting. Based on this only the prosecution states that he facilitated the commitment of crimes.” The prosecution additionally accused him of downloading articles from the internet about the activities of Hizb-ut-Tahrir. The charges brought against him — complicity in the activities of a banned organization of extremist character under Article 36, part 5, and Article 307.3, part 2 of the Criminal Code of Tajikistan – carry a maximum penalty of five years’ imprisonment.

Urunboy Usmonov has pleaded not guilty and told the judge that all his meetings and interviews with Hizb-ut-Tahrir members were of purely professional character as a journalist.

Amnesty International believes that Urunboy Usmonov, who worked for the BBC Central Asian service for 10 years, was targeted to punish him for his journalistic work and for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression. It was part of his assignment by the BBC to report about judicial trials and activities of the Hizb-ut-Tahrir movement in Tajikistan. In this context it was normal journalistic practice to interview people of all persuasions and beliefs, to study their ideology, and to keep his sources confidential.

Urunboy Usmonov was detained by officers of the State Committee of National Security (SCNS) in Khujand on 13 June 2011. According to the BBC and Urunboy Usmonov’s lawyer, officers tortured and ill-treated him, including by burning his arms with cigarettes and beating him, before his case was passed to the SCNS investigator and his detention was officially registered on 14 June. Fayziniso Vahidova told Amnesty International on 24 August: “They wanted him to ’confess’ to Hizb-ut-Tahrir membership but he was able to resist. However, they got him to state in writing that he should have reported to the authorities about his meetings with his sources of information.” According to the lawyer, before his case was passed to the investigator, SCNS officers also forced him under torture to write a statement renouncing the services of a lawyer: “They said that a lawyer can’t help anyway in political cases and that there had never been a case where anyone accused of Hizb-ut-Tahrir membership had been acquitted by a court.”

To Amnesty International’s knowledge, no forensic medical examination was conducted to investigate the torture allegations although injuries were reportedly visible when he was presented to the judge on 15 June and on 16 June international and local media started to report about alleged torture. Following an international outcry Urunboy Usmonov was released on bail on 14 July.

Urunboy Usmonov’s co-defendants are accused of crimes including setting up a criminal organization and incitement to national, racial or religious hatred. Three of them have not been represented by a lawyer at the trial. A person present at the trial told Amnesty International: “It is unknown whether they were held incommunicado and whether they were tortured. They are too scared to talk about anything like that”. Reportedly, the judge asked no questions about the treatment of all defendants in pre-trial detention.

Under international human rights law, information and confessions obtained from the defandants under torture or threats of torture and without the presence of his lawyer must not be used as evidence in court except as evidence against the alleged perpetrators. Allegations of torture, other ill-treatment and threats of torture must be investigated thoroughly, impartially and independently.

Backgrond information
Urunboy Usmonov was initially accused of membership in the banned movement Hizb-ut-Tahrir, and of conducting extremist propaganda using the internet, distributing the group’s literature and recruiting new members, an Interior Ministry spokesperson reported on 15 June. However, the investigation found no evidence of membership and, as reported by SCNS officials on 6 July, subsequently focused on his alleged involvement in the banned organization and on failing to inform the authorities of his contacts with it.

Urunboy Usmonov did not come home from work on 13 June. The next day he briefly returned to his family’s home in Khujand. He was in the presence of SCNS officers, who had come to search the house. His relatives saw injuries on his neck that they believe he sustained from torture or other forms of ill-treatment in detention.

Amnesty International has criticized human rights violations in the country including torture and ill-treatment by law enforcement officers; impunity for torturers; restrictions of freedom of speech; and violence against women.

In recent years independent media outlets and journalists have faced criminal and civil law suits for criticizing the government.

Law enforcement officers have in many cases been accused of torturing or beating detainees. Safeguards against torture enshrined in domestic law are not always adhered to. For example, while the new Criminal Procedure Code stipulates that detainees are entitled to a lawyer from the moment of their arrest, in practice lawyers are at the mercy of investigators who can deny them access for many days. During this period of incommunicado detention, the risk of torture or other ill-treatment is particularly high.

http://www.amnesty.org/

Press release/ Communiqué de presse

REPORTERS WITHOUT BORDERS/ REPORTERS SANS FRONTIÈRES

Press release/ Communiqué de presse

23.08.2011

English : http://en.rsf.org/tadjikistan-bbc-correspondent-tells-court-he-23-08-2011,40553.html

Français : http://fr.rsf.org/tadjikistan-poursuite-du-proces-du-23-08-2011,40548.html

TAJIKISTAN : BBC correspondent tells court he was tortured while detained
Reporters Without Borders reiterates it call to the judicial authorities to drop all charges against BBC correspondent Urinboy Usmonov, whose trial began on 16 August in the northern city of Khujand.

“Usmonov’s claims of being tortured while in detention are shocking,” Reporters Without Borders said. “They must be the subject of a serious investigation and those responsible should be punished. Unfortunately this is just the latest in a long list of irregularities since his arrest on 13 June, including denial of defence rights for a long period, statements obtained under duress and lack of evidence. His acquittal is the only way the authorities can emerge from this without completely discrediting themselves.”

The BBC reported on 19 August that during last week’s hearings, Usmonov said he had been burned with lit cigarettes and beaten while detained.

After his arrest on 13 June, he was initially accused of being a member of the outlawed Islamist party Hizb-ut-Tahrir. Now he is charged with being in contact with Hizb-ut-Tahrir without telling the authorities.

http://en.rsf.org/tadjikistan-bbc-correspondent-tells-court-he-23-08-2011,40553.html

Grants available for documentary projects

Documentary filmmakers from developing countries can apply for a grant.

The Jan Vrijman Fund, sponsored by the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), provides funding for creative documentaries and documentary events in developing countries. The maximum contribution is ?15,000 (about US$21,400).

Project directors should have the nationality of a developing country and live and work in a developing country, as defined on the DAC list. The fund strives to have a minimum of 18% of the selected projects from countries from the two left columns (Least Developed Countries and Lower Income Countries.)

For more information, click here: http://www.idfa.nl/industry/markets-funding/vrijman-fund/Submit-your-project.aspx

http://www.idfa.nl/industry/markets-funding/vrijman-fund/Submit-your-project.aspx

Kazakh Web TV Journalists Link Inspections To Coverage

ALMATY, Kazakhstan — A web-based television channel in Kazakhstan says it has been subjected to intrusive inspections because of its independent news coverage, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

Two editors of the Almaty-based Stan-TV, Elina Zhdanova and Baurzhan Musirov, told journalists on August 23 that their offices were inspected without prior warning last week by representatives of the Almaty city architecture-and-construction-control, fire-safety control, and sanitary-control boards.

They said the inspectors told them the inspections were undertaken in response to written complaints from residents of nearby apartment blocks about a large antenna placed on the roof of Stan-TV’s office. The inspectors said the residents complained that the antenna was affecting their health.

Zhdanova and Musirov said they subsequently met with some of those residents, who told them local police pressured them to write letters of complaint.

The Stan-TV representatives told journalists they plan to formally request that Almaty city police and the National Security Committee (KNB) investigate whether the inspection of their offices was legal.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kazakh_journalists_link_inspections_to_coverage/24305881.html

Ещё один сайт на WordPress