In the weekly Freedom of Speech Roundup, Sampsonia Way presents some of the week’s top news on freedom of expression, journalists in danger, artists in exile, and banned literature.
Protests in Jenin for the release of Zakaria Zubeidi, co-founder of the Freedom Theatre. September 10, 2012. Photo: Sawt Al-Mana
In other news, the Ethiopian government pardoned two Swedish journalists who were sentenced to 11 years in prison, and the Lebanese organization MARCH has launched a virtual Museum of Censorship highlighting censorship in Lebanon since the 1940′s.
Follow the links below covering these stories and more for the week of September 9-15.
Urgent Call to Action: Free Zakaria Zubeidi
On September 9, Zakaria Zubeidi, co-founder of the Freedom Theatre in Jenin, announced that he will embark on a complete food and fluid strike in response to the postponement of his release from Palestinian Authority prison. More information here.“The Satanic Verses,” the Fatwa, and a Life Changed
The New Yorker. Salman Rushdie recounts the day he learned the Ayatollah sentenced him to death over his novel The Satanic Verses. He explores his writing process for the novel and the world’s reaction to the controversial book. Read here.Indian Cartoonist Jailed for Images Criticizing Government
CPJ. Aseem Trivedi was arrested last Saturday for cartoons he posted on the internet that “insulted national honor” by “mocking national symbols” and “criticizing corruption.” A Mumbai court ordered that Trivedi be held until September 24, but a trial date has not yet been set. Read here.Swedish Journalists Schibbye and Persson pardoned by Ethiopia
Voice of America. After being sentenced to 11 years in prison for “supporting an illegal terrorist group” and illegally crossing the Ethiopian border, two Swedish journalists have been released as part of a mass amnesty to mark Ethiopia’s New Year. Read here.Censors Monkey With China Art Show before 18th Party Congress
Reuters. “…the digitally manipulated photo of China’s legendary Monkey King facing Tiananmen Gate, by Beijing-based artist Chi Peng, was one of several works at the Shanghai Contemporary Art Fair deemed unfit for display by Shanghai’s culture police.” Read here.Lebanon: A Virtual Museum for Censorship
Global Voices. On September 2 Lebanese organization MARCH launched a Virtual Museum of Censorship, an online database of censorship cases in Lebanon since the 1940s. Read here.Filling in the Gaps: Reading the Ramil Safarov Case in Azerbaijan
Radio Free Europe. Katy Pearce, an assistant professor in the University of Washington’s Department of Communications, looks at how, since Ramil Safarov’s alleged murder of an Armenian serviceman in 2004, the Azerbaijani media has framed the case and constructed a narrative of the killing that is at odds with facts presented at the trial. Read here.Radio Free Europe presents responses from Azerbaijani citizens about Rami Safarov’s recent pardon.
No comments:
Post a Comment