International Press Institute – Pakistan Freedom of Expression Monitor http://pakistanfoemonitor.org News with beliefs, thoughts, ideas, and emotions Sun, 23 Sep 2018 14:42:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 216189435 PPF urged Bulgarian authorities to stop targeting journalists  http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/ppf-urged-bulgarian-authorities-to-stop-targeting-journalists/ Sun, 23 Sep 2018 14:42:23 +0000 https://www.pakistanpressfoundation.org/?p=92055 Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Rumen Radev, President of Bulgaria has expressed concern over the arrest of two journalists for investigating a scam in EU-funded projects in Bulgaria and Romania. PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter, has urged the authorities and security forces to stop targeting journalists for their […]]]>

Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) in a letter to Rumen Radev, President of Bulgaria has expressed concern over the arrest of two journalists for investigating a scam in EU-funded projects in Bulgaria and Romania.

PPF Secretary General Owais Aslam Ali in his letter, has urged the authorities and security forces to stop targeting journalists for their work.

According to International Press Institute (IPI), Dimitar Stoyanov, a reporter for Bivol (an investigative journalism website in Bulgaria) and Attila Biro of the RISE Project (a non-profit journalism organization in Romania) were detained by authorities in Radomir for several hours. They were held for attempting to prevent and document the destruction of evidence related to the inquiry funded by IPI’s #IJ4EU grant programme.

Bivol released a report on September 10, which spoke about “large-scale and wide-spread corruption” in EU-funded projects in Bulgaria worth hundreds of millions of Bulgarian leva. The report was based on the contents of accounting documents from “a network of consultancy firms linked to large construction companies.”

The editor-in-chief of Bivol, Atanas Tchobanov, told IPI that they received a tip-off that the GP Group, one of the organizations mentioned in the report, was removing equipment and documents from its headquarters in Sofia, the Bulgarian capital. Tchobanov said that they also informed the authorities but nothing was done.

On September 13, Bivol was informed that the destroyed material had been found near Radomir. They again informed the authorities and then the journalists Stoyanov and Biro reached the spot where they found the destroyed documents and other evidence.

The local police than arrived on the spot and detained Stoyanov and Biro. The two showed their press cards but the police refused to release them. Police also seized their cell phones without giving them a chance to inform their colleagues. The journalists were released in the early hours of September 14. The head of Bulgaria’s anti-mafia police later apologized for the incident.

 

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IPI names Iran’s Ahmad Zeidabadi World Press Freedom Hero http://pakistanfoemonitor.org/ipi-names-irans-ahmad-zeidabadi-world-press-freedom-hero/ Tue, 01 Mar 2016 07:43:24 +0000 http://www.pakistanpressfoundation.org/?p=83130 VIENNA: The International Press Institute (IPI) today named as its 68th World Press Freedom Hero prominent Iranian journalist, academic, writer and political analyst Ahmad Zeidabadi, who has courageously fought for freedom of expression, human rights and democracy in his country despite continued persecution by authorities. IPI also announced today that independent Turkish news platform Medyascope.tv […]]]>

VIENNA: The International Press Institute (IPI) today named as its 68th World Press Freedom Hero prominent Iranian journalist, academic, writer and political analyst Ahmad Zeidabadi, who has courageously fought for freedom of expression, human rights and democracy in his country despite continued persecution by authorities.

IPI also announced today that independent Turkish news platform Medyascope.tv was the recipient of its 2016 Free Media Pioneer Award, citing the website’s groundbreaking use of new technologies to impart independent news and information in a media landscape under tremendous pressure.

Both awards, which are being given in partnership with Copenhagen-based International Media Support (IMS), will be presented during a special awards ceremony and gala dinner on March 19 in Doha, Qatar during IPI’s annual World Congress and General Assembly.

IPI’s World Press Freedom Hero Award honours journalists who have made significant contributions to the promotion of press freedom, particularly in the face of great personal risk.

Zeidabadi has suffered multiple arrests, imprisonment in solitary confinement, internal exile, and a lifetime ban on social and political activities – including practicing his profession as a journalist and travelling abroad – due to his journalistic work.

IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi said Zeidabadi was chosen “because of his exceptional courage, resilience and commitment to press freedom and freedom of expression in Iran, which in recent years has been one of the world’s biggest jailers of journalists”.

She continued: “Zeidabadi has shown great bravery and determination in supporting reform in Iran in the face of continued oppression by an autocratic regime. We hope that recent political developments in the country signal positive change and that this award will serve to bring renewed attention to his story, as well as that of all journalists in Iran who have been persecuted for seeking to report the news and inform the public.”

In a message sent to IPI on Feb. 26, Zeidabadi said that in his situation a man might think that he has been sentenced to a “silent death” and completely forgotten. However, he said, the news that IPI had named him a “World Press Freedom Hero” reminded that throughout the world there are colleagues and institutions who have not forgotten him. This gave him hope, he said, that one day he might once again be able to freely speak, write and analyse.

Zeidabadi was among dozens of Iranian journalists and supporters of the country’s pro-reform movement detained shortly after the 2009 Iranian presidential election. Arrested on June 29, 2009 and charged with acting against national security, disturbing public opinion and spreading propaganda against the Holy Islamic Republic, he was sentenced in December 2009 to six years in prison, five years in internal exile, and a lifetime ban on social and political activities, including practicing his profession as a journalist.

Held in solitary confinement for the first 35 days after his arrest, Zeidabadi was reportedly kept in horrific conditions and severely beaten during interrogation. He went on a hunger strike to protest his detention and had to be hospitalised for 17 days. Immediately after having served his full term in prison, he was transferred to the city of Gonabad in north-eastern Iran to begin his time in exile. However, he was released from exile while on a break visiting his family in Tehran on July 23, 2015.

A former editor of the reformist newspaper Azad and contributor to the dailies Ettela’at and Hamshahri, BBC Persian and the Persian/English news site Rooz, Zeidabadi has been arrested multiple times for his work as a journalist.

He was first ordered arrested in July 2000 during a crack-down on pro-reform journalists and sentenced to 13 months in prison. While there, he issued a well-publicised open letter protesting the Iranian judiciary’s treatment of journalists in prison. In 2002 he was arrested again and eventually sentenced to 23 months behind bars. The sentence was later reduced to 13 months on appeal, but Zeidabadi remained subject to a five-year ban on engaging in “social activities” or practicing journalism.

In 2007, Zeidabadi authored a widely publicised open letter to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamanei, questioning the legal and logical rationale for prohibiting criticism of the supreme leader and noting that journalists in other countries were allowed to criticise their leaders. When he was again arrested in 2009, he was reportedly subjected to harsher treatment because of the letter and his interrogators demanded that he apologise to Khamanei for not addressing him as “exalted leader”.

Zeidabadi was previously honoured by the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) in 2010 with its Golden Pen of Freedom Award and in 2011 he was the recipient of UNESCO’s Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize.

Medyascope.tv is an independent platform that delivers original and uncensored audiovisual journalistic content to online audiences. Most of its content – op-ed, analysis and discussion programmes on subjects ranging from national and international politics to economy, sports and cultural interests – is initially broadcast live through Periscope, a video streaming app for iOS and Android, then posted on their website, http://medyascope.tv. Video content is also made available in audio format via podcasts on iTunes and SoundCloud.

It was launched in August 2015 by prominent Turkish journalist Ruşen Çakır, a former senior correspondent for the Turkish daily Vatan and contributor to various other media outlets, including Tempo, Cumhuriyet, Milliyet, CNN Türk and NTV. Since then, Medyascope has grown in popularity as an independent, alternative source of news to mainstream Turkish media, which has come under increasing and widespread government pressure.

“Medyascope provides a transparent and independent voice in a media landscape in which both news outlets and journalists find themselves under enormous pressure by the Turkish government,” Trionfi said. “It gives journalists – including many who have been dismissed from their jobs due to government pressure – an important new platform for reaching a large audience with uncensored and independent news, and provides a useful model that could be replicated in other countries around the world.”

Commenting on Medyascope’s recognition as 2016 Free Media Pioneer, Çakır told IPI that “this award will give Medyascope most valuable recognition as a reputable, respectable media platform, also disproving the naysayers that tried to cast gloom on this venture from the beginning”.

He added: “The award also carries a globally acknowledged confirmation for our claim that ethical journalism is still possible even with limited resources and funds, which will surely make our future path an easier one.”

The annual IPI Free Media Pioneer Award was established in 1996 to recognise news or media organisations that have made innovations that have promoted news access or quality, or benefitted journalists and the media community, thereby ensuring freer and more independent media in their country or region.

International Press Institute

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