International Press Institute (IPI)

Articles by International Press Institute (IPI)

Link to: Vehicle owned by Montenegrin daily set on fire in latest incident targeting the newspaper

Vehicle owned by Montenegrin daily set on fire in latest incident targeting the newspaper

A car marked with the name of the the Montenegrin daily Vijesti was set ablaze on a street in the Podgorica on 13 February 2014, the latest of several attacks against Vijesti‘s journalists and property over the past eight years. In three separate incidents in 2011, four company cars were set on fire by unidentified assailants.

Link to: Gambia’s ‘green’ revolution

Gambia’s ‘green’ revolution

Authorities in The Gambia have pressed charges against two journalists over an article written in December 2013. The report describes a meeting where 19 members of the “Green Youths”, a group loyal to the ruling Alliance of Patriotic Re-Orientation and Construction, announced that they planned to join the United Democratic Party.

Refugees sit in a mattress camp in Votivkirche church in Vienna, 23 January 2013. , REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader

Austrian asylum advocate faces prison time over op-ed

An Austrian man who argued in an op-ed that some human smugglers perform a public service could spend up to two years in prison in a case that has chilling implications for free expression.

A woman picks vegetables near a residential compound under construction in Zhejiang province, China, 17 January 2014, REUTERS/William Hong

Transparency, independent media are vital for global development plan

195 civil society organisations from around the world have called on the UN to put government accountability and independent media at the centre of a new framework for global development.

Link to: Detained Egyptian cameraman Mohammed Badr acquitted

Detained Egyptian cameraman Mohammed Badr acquitted

Egyptian television cameraman Mohammed Badr acquitted more than six months after he was detained by security forces for allegedly carrying a weapon.

Ukrainian opposition leaders Oleh Tyahnybok, centre left, Vitali Klitschko, centre, and Arseniy Yatsenyuk talk to lawmakers in the parliament session hall in Kiev, 29 January 2014., AP Photo/Sergei Chuzavkov

Following violent clashes, Ukrainian Parliament votes to repeal anti-protest legislation

The International Press Institute and its affiliate, the South East Europe Media Organisation welcome news that Ukraine’s Parliament voted to repeal sweeping anti-protest legislation that had incited violent clashes between protestors and police.

Link to: Former war crimes reporter attacked in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Former war crimes reporter attacked in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Sinan Alic said that an unknown man attacked him at approximately 11 a.m. last Saturday near his weekend home in Trakilovici, close to the town of Tuzla. Alic, who at one time was active in reporting on war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina, said that he received threats by SMS in recent months.

Link to: Trinidad and Tobago should pass bill to increase safeguards for press freedom

Trinidad and Tobago should pass bill to increase safeguards for press freedom

The Libel and Defamation (Amendment) Bill, 2013 would amend existing criminal law to abolish the offence of malicious defamatory libel, while preserving the offence of defamatory libel known to be false.