January 15th, 2015
onaissues
Raif told me he is in a lot of pain after his flogging, his health is poor. I told our children about the news last week so that they would not find out about it from friends at school. It is a huge shock for them. International pressure is crucial; I believe if we keep up the support it will eventually pay off.

Ensaf Haidar on her husband, Raif Badawi, who was sentenced by Saudi authorities to 1,000 lashes and ten years in jail for content he published to his blog. Amnesty International, Saudi Arabia set to resume flogging of Raif Badawi this Friday.

The News: Raif Badawi was sentenced last May in Saudi Arabia for insulting the country’s clerics via his blog. Last Friday he was lashed 50 times and under his sentence, will be flogged 50 times every Friday for the next 19 weeks.

Via The Guardian:

Badawi’s sentence stems from his creation of the website Free Saudi Liberals, now closed, which he envisaged as a forum for political and social debate.

He was subsequently charged over content he posted, including an article in which he was accused of ridiculing the kingdom’s religious police, the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice – as well as failing to remove “offensive” posts by others. The prosecution originally called for him to be tried for “apostasy” or abandoning his religion, which carries the death penalty.

As The Guardian notes in a previous article, “Badawi was originally sentenced in 2013 to seven years in prison and 600 lashes in relation to the charges, but after an appeal, the judge stiffened the punishment. Following his arrest, his wife and children left the kingdom for Canada.”

(via futurejournalismproject)

Reblogged from The FJP
December 10th, 2014
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futurejournalismproject:

Global Internet Freedoms Decline for Fourth Straight Year

Via Freedom House

Freedom on the Net 2014 — the fifth annual comprehensive study of internet freedom around the globe, covering developments in 65 countries that occurred between May 2013 and May 2014 — finds internet freedom around the world in decline for the fourth consecutive year, with 36 out of 65 countries assessed in the report experiencing a negative trajectory during the coverage period.

In a departure from the past, when most governments preferred a behind-the-scenes approach to internet control, countries rapidly adopted new laws that legitimize existing repression and effectively criminalize online dissent.

The past year also saw increased government pres­sure on independent news websites, which had previously been among the few uninhibited sources of information in many countries, in addition to more people detained or prosecuted for their digital activities than ever before.

Visit Freedom House to see how your country stacks up.

For example, Iceland has the world’s greatest Internet freedoms followed by Estonia. The United States comes in sixth with the following warning for journalists and newsrooms:

In November 2013, the free expression and literature advocacy group PEN America released the results of a survey showing that the NSA surveillance revelations had resulted in increased self-censorship among writers. Since the revelations began in June 20013, 28 percent of respondents reported having altered or avoided social media activities, 24 percent reported deliberately avoiding certain topics in phone or email conversations, and 16 percent reported avoiding writing or speaking about a particular topic.

Additionally, Human Rights Watch conducted a survey of journalists and lawyers revealing the degree to which NSA surveillance has impacted their ability to communicate with sources and clients confidentially. Journalists reported that government officials are significantly less likely to speak with journalists than they were a few years ago due to concerns about anonymity and the ability of the intelligence agencies to access their communications information. Lawyers also reported facing increasing pressure to conceal or secure their communications with clients, particularly in cases with foreign governments or prosecutions that might spark an intelligence inquiry.

Images: Some takeaways from Freedom House’s Freedom on the Net report. Select to embiggen.

Reblogged from The FJP
December 1st, 2014
onaissues
The proposal not only invents the crime of #cyberterrorism from social networks. It also invented the “public peace”.
Reblogged from Global Voices
August 18th, 2014
onaissues

onthemedia:

Steve Terrill is a journalist who works in Rwanda. Or at least he worked in Rwanda, until he accidentally got the office of Rwanda’s president Paul Kagame to implicate itself in a long-running online harassment campaign. On the latest episode of TLDR, Alex talks to Steve about inadvertently exposing the Rwandan government’s most prolific troll, and being banned from the country as a result.

Reblogged from On the Media
August 14th, 2014
onaissues

Numerous media outlets and citizen journalists have reported excessive use of force by police toward those protesting the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed teen who was killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., Saturday, Aug. 9.

Wednesday evening, two reporters were arrested while covering the third day of protests. Wesley Lowery of the Washington Post (and ONA14 presenter) details how he was instructed to stop filming police officers and was slammed into a soda machine while he was being arrested. Ryan Reilly of the Huffington Post said police purposefully shoved his head against the glass of the building. They have both been released.

To follow the ongoing situation in Ferguson:

Three national reporters who have been covering the situation include Jamelle Bouie of Slate and Joel D. Anderson of Buzzfeed, who are on the scene, and Gene Demby of NPR CodeSwitch.

Photos via Jamelle Bouie on Twitter. Front page of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch from Aug. 14, 2014 via Newseum.

Update: Yamiche Alcidor of USA Today is covering situation from Ferguson.

June 24th, 2014
onaissues
Reblogged from Afterthoughts
May 24th, 2013
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NBC’s Michael Isikoff reports: 

Attorney General Eric Holder signed off on a controversial search warrant that identified Fox News reporter James Rosen as a “possible co-conspirator” in violations of the Espionage Act and authorized seizure of his private emails, a law enforcement official told NBC News on Thursday. 

Holder OK’d search warrant for Fox News reporter’s private emails, official says - Open Channel)

Trevor Timm at Freedom of the Press Foundation wants to know why is Holder in charge of oversight on his own surveillance of journalists policy?

New voices called for Holder to resign Thursday. Matt Rothshild, the editor at the Progressive, called for his resignation on Democracy Now! and Huffington Post ran a headline of the front page of their website titled, “Time to Go: Holder OK’d Press Probe” which can now be accessed as “Eric Holder Signed Off On Search Warrant For James Rosen Emails: NBC News." RNC Chairman Reince Priebus called on Holder to resign last week, as did Michael Tomasky of the Daily Beast. 

Screenshot via Josh Stearns

On Friday, 57 civil liberties, press freedom and public interest groups sent a letter to Holder, demanding "full accounting of the Justice Department’s targeting of journalists and whistleblowers.” Free Press has started a petition to the Justice Department asking that they stop monitoring journalists’ phone records. 

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