News
28 May 2012
Nigerian trade union leader Osmond Ugwu was detained in October 2011 and jailed for three months on trumped-up charges.
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25 May 2012
A repressive emergency law adopted in Canada's Quebec province violates freedoms of speech, assembly and movement in breach of international obligations.
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29 May 2012
Last year's killing of Saleem Shahzad highlighted the perils faced by journalists in Pakistan.
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28 May 2012
Police in the Russian capital stopped an attempted Pride and detained dozens, including the event's organizers.
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29 May 2012
An exiled member of the Syrian Non Violence Movement calls for increased international pressure to end human rights abuses in Syria.
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In Iraq, at least 64 journalists and media workers were reported killed
in 2006, bringing the total to at least 139 since the March 2003
invasion of Iraq. A few were killed by US troops and Iraqi forces while
covering fighting between these troops and insurgents, but the majority
were killed by armed groups opposed to the government and the presence
of foreign troops, or militiamen men belonging to Shi'a religious
groups.
In Russia, where the murder of human rights journalist Anna
Politkovskaya placed a spotlight on press freedom in that country,
reporting on human rights violations and dissent is at best difficult
and often be dangerous. Journalists who have covered the recent
"Dissenter's marches" have been detained and several newspapers have
received warnings for publishing information about opposition movements
and giving voice to dissenting opinions. One human rights organization
has been closed for publishing non-violent statements by
representatives of Chechen separatist leaders.
In possibly the most well known case worldwide, Chinese journalist Shi
Tao was arrested in 2004 for sending an email to a foreign website and
charged with "illegally divulging state secrets abroad". The email
described a briefing that he and other journalists had received from
the Chinese Communist Party's Propaganda Department on how they should
report anniversary commemorations of the Tiananmen Square massacre. He
was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment in 2005 following an unfair
trial. Amnesty International has adopted Shi Tao as a prisoner of
conscience.
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