Access to Information

Open, safe, and equitable access to information, its circulation and integrity, both online and offline

2281 articles
A South Sudanese government soldier and a woman carrying a container pass each other in the street in Malakal, Upper Nile State, in South Sudan, 21 January 2014., AP Photo/Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin

South Sudanese towns suffer information vacuum

In this CPJ Blog post, CPJ East Africa Representative Tom Rhodes reports that the majority of local news houses in South Sudan self-censor or follow either the government or rebel narratives, fearing retribution by either warring party.

Link to: Two Nepalese journalists receive threats; activist denied information

Two Nepalese journalists receive threats; activist denied information

Two journalists received death threats in connection with their news reporting in Mahottari, Nepal. The assailants were apprehended although political parties in the district are reported to have piled pressure on the police to release the men.

The Maurice Lamontagne Institute, located in the province of Québec, is part of Fisheries and Oceans Canada's network of a dozen research centres, Fisheries and Oceans Canada/P. Dionne

Spread of knowledge in peril as Canada shuts federal department libraries

Today, the preservation and spread of knowledge through publicly accessible libraries appears to be in peril at the national level, as the Government of Canada is closing a number of its federal departments’ libraries.

Link to: Draft EU financial rules hamper press freedom

Draft EU financial rules hamper press freedom

A draft EU Regulation designed to restore confidence in financial benchmarks following the LIBOR and EURIBOR scandals is set to undermine press freedom and journalists’ right to protect their sources, if Members of European Parliament fail to adopt important amendments to the proposal on 30 January.

REUTERS/Jo Yong-Hak

South Koreans clash over history books

South Korea is embroiled in a “textbook war” over what high school students learn in history class. With schools selecting their textbooks for the coming academic year, objections have been raised to one textbook that critics felt distorted the country’s history of Japanese occupation and military dictatorship.

Residents participate in a peaceful demonstration near the scene of a military ambush near the village of Mazizi in North Kivu, 6 January 2014., REUTERS/Kenny Katombe

Coverage of army colonel’s murder censored in Democratic Republic of Congo

Reporters Without Borders condemns attempts by military and civilian officials in the eastern province of Nord-Kivu to prevent journalists from covering the murder of an army colonel, Mamadou Ndala, in an ambush near the city of Beni on 2 January.

Link to: Human Rights Watch official refused entry into UAE

Human Rights Watch official refused entry into UAE

Authorities in the United Arab Emirates refused to allow Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch, to enter the country on 24 January.

Link to: Landmark freedom of information legislation announced in the Maldives

Landmark freedom of information legislation announced in the Maldives

The Maldives’ Right to Information Act is aimed at enhancing the ability for the public and media to access information and will see the president appoint a Commissioner of Information to oversee information officers in every government office.

In 2013, HRW expressed concern over the plight of minority groups such as the Rohingya Muslim community in Burma, pictured in this August 2013 photo after a lockdown on their quarter in the city of Sittwe, REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun

World Report: Suppression of minority views, eradication of privacy and other rights struggles

In many countries, a misguided equation of democracy with the presumed desires of a majority prompted rulers to suppress minority views in 2013, says HRW in its World Report. And while Edward Snowden’s disclosures pointed to the US government’s mass surveillance, global outrage at the assault on the right to privacy offers some promise of change.

Derek Clark MEP, Euro Realist Newsletter/Flickr/http://bit.ly/1dCj0O3

U.K. Independence Party pledges to ban climate change lessons in schools

The U.K. Independence Party has promised it will ban the teaching of climate change in schools, if elected in May next year. The party’s 2010 manifesto included a pledge to ban Al Gore’s Oscar-winning global warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth from schools.

A picture illustration shows icons of WeChat and Weibo app in Beijing, 5 December 2013, REUTERS/Petar Kujundzic

Social media changing the protest landscape in China

In China, social media offers a critical viewpoint that is lacking from state-controlled media. While it has not been able to completely detach itself from the government’s censorship, the increasing use of social media and the rapid spread of information is putting pressure on the government that it has never felt before.

Books are displayed on the pavement during an event marking the World Book and Copyright Day in downtown Bucharest, 23 April 2013, REUTERS/Bogdan Cristel

Copyright week: Six principles that should guide policy

In the week leading up the two-year anniversary of the SOPA blackout protests, EFF and others are talking about key principles that should guide copyright policy.

EFF

Transparency is fundamental to good copyright policy, EFF and partners say

In the week leading up the two-year anniversary of the SOPA [Stop Online Piracy Act] blackout protests, EFF and others are talking about key principles that should guide copyright policy.

Sunni fighters have been in control of several parts of Fallujah province since last week , REUTERS/Stringer

News blackout imposed on fighting in Al-Anbar province in Iraq

Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki’s government is trying to control the production and dissemination of news reports about the fighting in Fallujah and Ramadi between the regular army and militias affiliated to Al-Qaeda and tribal groups.

A rally in support of asylum seekers in Sydney, Australia, 10 August 2013; in 2013 Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced tough measures to deter asylum seekers, saying anyone who arrived by boat would be sent to Papua New Guinea or Nauru for processing and resettlement, REUTERS/Daniel Munoz

Foreign journalists not welcome as Nauru hikes cost of media visas

The small Pacific nation of Nauru has opted for an innovative way to discourage foreign media scrutiny of a touchy human rights issue: jack-up the cost of a journalist visa 40-fold. The move is aimed at detering foreign media outlets and freelance journalists from seeking to report on the country’s treatment of asylum seekers.

Link to: Pakistan-based human rights group files complaint against UK over mass surveillance

Pakistan-based human rights group files complaint against UK over mass surveillance

Privacy International’s partner organisation, Bytes for All, has filed a complaint against the UK Government, decrying the human rights violations inherent in such extensive surveillance and demonstrating how the UK’s mass surveillance operations and its policies have a disproportionate impact on those who live outside the country.