Thursday, September 29, 2011

Rybak proposal slashes MTN budget including Somali TV, Ethiopian TV, Oromia TV, Awade Ethiopia, Vietnamese Minnesotans TV, | Twin Cities Daily Planet

Rybak proposal slashes MTN budget

September 28, 2011

The Minneapolis Television Network (MTN) is slated for deep cuts in Mayor Rybak’s proposed 2012 budget, despite the fact that Public, Education and Government (PEG) fees from Comcast, which by law need to go toward public access television, will double. The mayor proposes cutting $250,000 from the program’s annual budget, leading to huge staffing and service cuts. Pam Colby, Executive Director of MTN, has concerns that the funding cut is, at least in part, retaliation for MTN allowing independent producers to broadcast content that some city officials find offensive.

MTN provides direct access to television broadcast equipment and cable television channels for a diverse community, offers training in the use of video, television and internet technologies and offers educational and mentoring opportunities for students in grades six through 12. Programming is also produced and geared toward a number of groups traditionally underrepresented in mainstream media including various ethnic groups, youth, seniors, the GLBT community and more, according to its website. Original programming at MTN includes numerous channels geared toward constituents communicating in their native languages, including Somali TV, Ethiopian TV, Oromia TV, Awade Ethiopia, Vietnamese Minnesotans TV, and Sahan TV-African Ethinic Magazine. 

What is MTN?

MTN was founded as an independent nonprofit organization by the Minneapolis Mayor and City Council in 1983, according to its website. State law required that the cable franchise in the city financially support community television. The first cable company in Minneapolis to do this was Rogers Cablevision and the current holder is Comcast Cable.

Though it’s a nonprofit, MTN is governed by nine board members appointed by the city council, the mayor, and three ex officio members representing the Minneapolis Public Schools, the City of Minneapolis, and Comcast Cable.

Free speech and its critics

MTN hasn’t been without its controversies. Part of its mandate is public access programming, meaning that it's supposed to be a forum for the community to have a show and exercise their free speech.

MTN ended up in the Sixth District Court after a 2005 MTN program hosted by Al Flowers during which Booker Hodges called then-City Council member Don Samuels a “House Negro”, indicating it was time to “kill” such people,according to Minnpost. The show was suspended, but Flowers filed a lawsuit against Don Samuels and the City of Minneapolis and ended up winning $3.

“Basically, the verdict was that the city should not tamper with the free speech on MTN,” said Colby, who said there have been other speech issues over the years.

Then, this year, MTN aired the Tyson Show at 11 p.m. on Sunday nights. The participants were all young African Americans, and the producer included sexual talking and dancing together in different parts of the show. The Tyson Show involved “bumping and grinding,” according to Colby. 

According to Colby, City Council member Barbara Johnson called her and said that the show needed to be taken off the air.

In an interview Johnson said she didn't recall telling Colby the show needed to be taken off the air, but she certain was "disgusted that it was on the air."

After the phone call, MTN staff reviewed the show, and concluded that it did not in fact break the obscenity law. “We are basically mandated at a federal level,” she said. “If a city council chooses to have these public access channels they need to protect the First Amendment on them.”

Colby responded to Johnson that there was nothing MTN could do about the show. Then, Colby received another phone call from Johnson. “She called me at home at 8 a.m. in the morning,” Colby said. “She was verbally harassing me about the show and what I was going to do about it. I was so startled to have somebody talk to me that early. I was just tongue-tied.” According to Colby, Johnson said that MTN was facilitating prostitution and that she was going to call the cops. Colby told Johnson to go right ahead — the council member had done so before.

Johnson said she didn't say the show facilitated prostitution.

According to Johnson, the show in question was “in very poor taste” and “vulgar.” She sent a copy of the show in question to Lt. Nancy Dunlap, from the Minneapolis Police Department’s Sex Crimes Unit. Dunlap found that one of the women in the video, contrary to Johnson’s suspicions, was over 18.

Dunlap told TC Daily Planet that there was nothing illegal in the video, although, according to Johnson, Dunlap agreed with her that the show was in very poor taste and “bordered on the obscene.”

Johnson felt the show, like another that she complained about two years ago,  promoted a particular business, with the producer saying to the audience to call him if they wanted to be on TV.

On August 2, Colby said, Johnson left a voicemail for Colby, asking what in the MTN charter makes them play mildly obscene programming, and making sure that she gets “this crap off the channel,” according to Colby.

Johnson, in an interview with TC Daily Planet, said her objection to the show had nothing to do with Rybak’s slashing of MTN’s budget. “As a city taxpayer and a cable viewer, I can express my opinion about a show that I found disgusting on our TV station.” Though she thinks the show was not the kind of programming she thinks should be on a publicly owned television station, Johnson said she would never retaliate against a city department. "I'm not stupid," she said.

John Stiles, Communications Director for Mayor R.T. Rybak, emailed a statement in response to questions about why MTN was being cut, and whether it was in retaliation for specific programming.

“In tough times — when too many people are still unemployed and property values are struggling to recover, when the state and federal governments are dramatically scaling back their commitment to local communities and when residents are rightfully concerned about high property taxes — everyone needs to cut back, including the City of Minneapolis. This is why Mayor Rybak’s 2012 budget proposal holds property taxes flat and makes difficult cuts to nearly every City department and program.”

Budget drops a year before PEG fees double

MTN funding from Minneapolis comes in part from the Public, Education and Government (PEG) fees paid to the city by Comcast cable. Last year, MTN received $702,000 from the city, though the city received over $2 million from Comcast in PEG fees and franchise fees, according to Colby. Comcast has about 74,000 subscribers, according to Colby, a number that has remained more or less constant throughout the recession. The mayor proposes to cut MTN's budget by $250,000 in 2012.

According to Colby, the Comcast PEG fees are slated to double on December 31, 2012. Unlike St. Paul’s public access station, SPNN, which receives PEG fees more directly in the form of a grant, the Minneapolis franchise fees go to the city’s general fund, with only a portion going to MTN, according to Colby. SPNN receives $840,000 in grant money from St. Paul, according to Mike Wassenaar, Executive Director from SPNN.*

City Councilmember Gary Schiff, said he’s not sure what the mayor was thinking in cutting MTN’s funding a year before the Comcast fees double. “MTN is responsible for bringing in all this new revenue,” he said. "If MTN is bringing in revenue as a result of the Comcast contract, they should be receiving benefit of that revenue.” Schiff said he’s concerned about what this potential funding gap could do to MTN’s programming, much of which benefits immigrant and refugee communities. Schiff said MTN is “absolutely worth protecting… We should focus on that gap so we don’t interrupt the quality programming that they’ve won awards for.”

Council Member Cam Gordon, too said he was concerned about the cut in funding to MTN. “One place I think we need to look first is within the [City of Minneapolis] communications department budget itself and perhaps spreading the cut more evenly,” he said in an email.

Public access in danger across the country

The budget challenges that MTN is facing in Minneapolis are part of a national trend. “We are fighting this battle at a national level,” Colby said. “From the Republican side, they are taking away the franchise fees to the cities, and redistributing it to the state,” she said.

Sylvia Strobel, Executive Director for Alliance for Community Media (ACM), said: “What we are seeing happen is devastating.” According to Strobel, a number of public access TV stations are seeing funding being yanked out from under them even though they are some of the “few sources of local news and information that still exist.”

Budgets for community television stations tend to be very small, according to Strobel, even though they produce “a phenomenal amount of programming.” Strobel said that Minneapolis model, where cable franchise fees go directly to the city, is more common than the franchise fees going directly to the nonprofit that runs the TV station. When the fees go to the city, Strobel said, “ It’s being absorbed and used for other purposes.” Meanwhile, cable subscriptions are declining, but that doesn’t have as much of an impact as reallocation of funds elsewhere.

This legislative session, ACM will be lobbying for the Community Access Preservation (CAP) Act, which is in the house and has bipartisan support. The act addresses the use of funds from these franchise fees earmarked for equipment, as opposed to operating costs, and to eliminate discriminatory treatment for cable access channels. They’ll be visiting Capital Hill on October 12.

MTN’S budget hearing is scheduled before the Ways and Means Committee, on October 5 at 11:30 AM in the Council Chambers room 317 of City Hall. The hearing is open to the public.

[FULL DISCLOSURE: Pam Colby is a former board member of the Twin Cities Media Alliance, the parent organization of the TC Daily Planet. Jay Gabler, arts editor of the TC Daily Planet, is a cast member of Freaky Deeky, a show which airs at 10 p.m. on Sundays on MTN, but Gabler had no part in assigning or editing this story.]

*Corrections, 5 p.m. on 9/28:
(1) Description of St. Paul franchise/PEG fee arrangement updated after speaking with Mike Wassanaar from SPNN.
(2) One quotation regarding obscenity and funding deleted

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Ethiopia: Journalist On the Run - Wikileaks Clarifies Its RoleallAfrica.com:

Earlier this week, Radio Netherlands ran a story about Ethiopian journalist Argaw Ashine, who had to flee his country after a confidential American diplomatic cable revealed his contacts with the US Embassy in Addis Abeba.

He squarely blames the whistleblowing website Wikileaks for his predicament. I called Wikileak's spokesman for an explanation. Kristinn Hrafnsson reiterated a previous statement: it was the action by the UK-based newspaper The Guardian to release the decryption key, which opened up wide access to the cables and subsequent cans of worms.

He explained: 'When former insiders at Wikileaks pointed out how to connect the dots, we were faced with the difficult question: are we going to wait and give the secret services the advantage of having sole access to this material or do we make sure that everyone has access to this information?' Wikileaks decided on the latter. In security-obsessed Ethiopia, tracing the US diplomatic cable to Mr Ashine was only a matter of time. But once again: 'It was not our call. It was our media partner, in this case The Guardian that decided to publish.'

Still, as we reported earlier, Mr Ashine and indeed the New York-based Committee to protect Journalists hold Wikileaks " ultimately responsible". An audibly exasperated Mr Hrafnsson responded: 'We have shown so many instances of wrongdoings against journalists in material that we have published without this kind of strong response from the Committee to protect Journalists.' He added that journalists have suffered fates worse than exile as a result of Wikileaks publications without such a strong reaction.

Meanwhile, Wikileaks has reconsidered its procedures in working with traditional media, as a result of this case. But, according to Wikileaks, there is someone else who could have acted to protect Mr Ashine: the US state department. The State Department was in receipt of information about threats to journalists in Ethiopia, a key US ally in the Horn of Africa. 'We repeatedly asked for their cooperation, which they denied,' said Mr Hrafnsson. 'If they are genuinely concerned about the people they call "their informants", they should cooperate with us.'

Mr Ashine may be considering legal action against Wikileaks but the spokesman would not be drawn on speculating about a response. He considers it more important to focus on the wider issue of press freedom. 'It is important for governments that are supporting oppressive governments to link demands for press freedom with aid to those countries.'

Monday, September 19, 2011

Ethiopia: Crackdown On Dissent Intensifies - Six More Activists Arrested Under Abusive Anti-Terrorism LawallAfrica.com: allAfrica.com:

London — The Ethiopian government should end its widening crackdown against opposition politicians and dissidents, Human Rights Watch said today.

In the past week, three well-known critics of the government - actor Debebe Eshetu, journalist Eskinder Nega, and opposition party leader Andualem Aragie - were arrested in Addis Ababa. Three other opposition party members were also detained.

Security forces arrested Eskinder, who is well-known in Ethiopia for his critical commentary, on the afternoon of September 14, while picking up his child from school. Andualem, vice chairman of the opposition party Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ) and executive committee member of Medrek, the largest opposition coalition, was arrested around the same time on his way to the UDJ offices. On September 8, the government also arrested the popular actor Eshetu for his alleged involvement in Ginbot 7, a banned opposition group.

"The recent spate of arrests points to a broadening crackdown against dissent by the Ethiopian authorities," said Rona Peligal, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "The detention of Debebe Eshetu, Eskinder Nega, and Andualem Aragie is just the latest reminder that it is very dangerous to criticize the government in Ethiopia."

Government spokesperson Shimelis Kemal told Human Rights Watch that the six people are being investigated under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of 2009 as a result of their alleged links with Ginbot 7 and alleged involvement in a terrorist plot.

All six are being held at the infamous Federal Police Crime Investigation Department, known as Maekelawi prison, in Addis Ababa, where torture is frequent. It is not known whether independent domestic and international organizations have access to Maekelawi prison, heightening concerns for their safety, Human Rights Watch said.

Debebe, Eskinder, and Andualem should be immediately released unless there is a credible basis for promptly charging them. The government crackdown appears to coincide with an expanded use of Ethiopia's abusive anti-terrorism law, Human Rights Watch said. The Anti-Terrorism Proclamation contains an overbroad and vague definition of terrorist acts and makes the publication of statements "likely to be understood as encouraging terrorist acts" punishable by imprisonment for 10 to 20 years. The government is exploiting the law's overly broad language to accuse peaceful critics, journalists, and political opponents of encouraging terrorism.

Under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, suspects can be held in custody for up to four months without charge. This is contrary to the Ethiopian constitution, which provides that suspects in detention should be charged or released within 48 hours, and violates international due process standards. Human Rights Watch has long called for the anti-terrorism law to be amended to bring it into line with Ethiopia's international obligations.

The arrests of Eskinder and Andualem may be related to their criticism of the anti-terrorism law, Human Rights Watch said. Both recently questioned the terrorism charges against other critics of the government. Eskinder published an article last week on the internet questioning the plausibility of journalists as terror suspects and denouncing Debebe's arrest on terror charges. Andualem has spoken out at recent opposition party press conferences about terrorist charges against opposition parties.

"Criticizing the anti-terror law is not a crime, nor is commenting on the arrests of government critics," said Peligal. "The Ethiopian government appears to be locking up anyone who speaks up for basic rights and greater freedom."

Three other opposition party members - two active members of UDJ and the general secretary of the Ethiopian National Democratic Party - were also detained on September 14, according to opposition activists. The arrests come after another opposition party member, Zerihun Gebre-Egzabiher of the Ethiopian National Democratic Party, and at least four journalists, two Ethiopian and two Swedish, were charged under the anti-terrorism law. The journalists have been held without charge for two months in Maekelawi and remain in detention.

Two leaders of the ethnic Oromo political opposition who were accused of having links with the banned insurgent group, the Oromo Liberation Front (ONLF), were arrested on terrorism charges in August.

Many of those currently detained or charged under the anti-terrorism law had previously been arrested and charged with treason following the contested 2005 elections.

"Ethiopia's international donors campaigned for the release of Debebe Eshetu, Eskinder Nega, Andualem Aragie, and 129 other members of the opposition and civil society when they were detained in 2005," said Peligal. "It's time for the US, the United Kingdom, and the European Union to find their voices once again."

Background

Eskinder and Andualem were among the 129 opposition political leaders, journalists, and human rights activists arrested and charged with treason and other crimes in late 2005, following the contested May 2005 national elections. They were both subsequently released after a presidential pardon.

Since his release Eskinder has faced ongoing harassment, surveillance, and intimidation.The authorities denied him a license to practice journalism.

The former leader of UDJ, Birtukan Midekssa, who was also among those arrested in 2005, was re-arrested in 2008 and held for almost two years, including for prolonged periods of solitary confinement. United Nations experts determined that her detention was arbitrary, in violation of international law. She was released in October 2010.

Ethiopia: Crackdown On Dissent Intensifies - Six More Activists Arrested Under Abusive Anti-Terrorism LawallAfrica.com: allAfrica.com:

London — The Ethiopian government should end its widening crackdown against opposition politicians and dissidents, Human Rights Watch said today.

In the past week, three well-known critics of the government - actor Debebe Eshetu, journalist Eskinder Nega, and opposition party leader Andualem Aragie - were arrested in Addis Ababa. Three other opposition party members were also detained.

Security forces arrested Eskinder, who is well-known in Ethiopia for his critical commentary, on the afternoon of September 14, while picking up his child from school. Andualem, vice chairman of the opposition party Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ) and executive committee member of Medrek, the largest opposition coalition, was arrested around the same time on his way to the UDJ offices. On September 8, the government also arrested the popular actor Eshetu for his alleged involvement in Ginbot 7, a banned opposition group.

"The recent spate of arrests points to a broadening crackdown against dissent by the Ethiopian authorities," said Rona Peligal, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "The detention of Debebe Eshetu, Eskinder Nega, and Andualem Aragie is just the latest reminder that it is very dangerous to criticize the government in Ethiopia."

Government spokesperson Shimelis Kemal told Human Rights Watch that the six people are being investigated under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of 2009 as a result of their alleged links with Ginbot 7 and alleged involvement in a terrorist plot.

All six are being held at the infamous Federal Police Crime Investigation Department, known as Maekelawi prison, in Addis Ababa, where torture is frequent. It is not known whether independent domestic and international organizations have access to Maekelawi prison, heightening concerns for their safety, Human Rights Watch said.

Debebe, Eskinder, and Andualem should be immediately released unless there is a credible basis for promptly charging them. The government crackdown appears to coincide with an expanded use of Ethiopia's abusive anti-terrorism law, Human Rights Watch said. The Anti-Terrorism Proclamation contains an overbroad and vague definition of terrorist acts and makes the publication of statements "likely to be understood as encouraging terrorist acts" punishable by imprisonment for 10 to 20 years. The government is exploiting the law's overly broad language to accuse peaceful critics, journalists, and political opponents of encouraging terrorism.

Under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, suspects can be held in custody for up to four months without charge. This is contrary to the Ethiopian constitution, which provides that suspects in detention should be charged or released within 48 hours, and violates international due process standards. Human Rights Watch has long called for the anti-terrorism law to be amended to bring it into line with Ethiopia's international obligations.

The arrests of Eskinder and Andualem may be related to their criticism of the anti-terrorism law, Human Rights Watch said. Both recently questioned the terrorism charges against other critics of the government. Eskinder published an article last week on the internet questioning the plausibility of journalists as terror suspects and denouncing Debebe's arrest on terror charges. Andualem has spoken out at recent opposition party press conferences about terrorist charges against opposition parties.

"Criticizing the anti-terror law is not a crime, nor is commenting on the arrests of government critics," said Peligal. "The Ethiopian government appears to be locking up anyone who speaks up for basic rights and greater freedom."

Three other opposition party members - two active members of UDJ and the general secretary of the Ethiopian National Democratic Party - were also detained on September 14, according to opposition activists. The arrests come after another opposition party member, Zerihun Gebre-Egzabiher of the Ethiopian National Democratic Party, and at least four journalists, two Ethiopian and two Swedish, were charged under the anti-terrorism law. The journalists have been held without charge for two months in Maekelawi and remain in detention.

Two leaders of the ethnic Oromo political opposition who were accused of having links with the banned insurgent group, the Oromo Liberation Front (ONLF), were arrested on terrorism charges in August.

Many of those currently detained or charged under the anti-terrorism law had previously been arrested and charged with treason following the contested 2005 elections.

"Ethiopia's international donors campaigned for the release of Debebe Eshetu, Eskinder Nega, Andualem Aragie, and 129 other members of the opposition and civil society when they were detained in 2005," said Peligal. "It's time for the US, the United Kingdom, and the European Union to find their voices once again."

Background

Eskinder and Andualem were among the 129 opposition political leaders, journalists, and human rights activists arrested and charged with treason and other crimes in late 2005, following the contested May 2005 national elections. They were both subsequently released after a presidential pardon.

Since his release Eskinder has faced ongoing harassment, surveillance, and intimidation.The authorities denied him a license to practice journalism.

The former leader of UDJ, Birtukan Midekssa, who was also among those arrested in 2005, was re-arrested in 2008 and held for almost two years, including for prolonged periods of solitary confinement. United Nations experts determined that her detention was arbitrary, in violation of international law. She was released in October 2010.

Two Ethiopian journalists detained on terrorism charges -CPJ

NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 23:   Ethiopian journalist...Image by Getty Images via @daylife


New York, September 16, 2011--Authorities in Ethiopia arrested two independent journalists this week on accusations of involvement in a terrorism plot, bringing the total number of journalists imprisoned since June under the country's far-reachingantiterrorism legislation to six, CPJ research shows.
On September 9, Ethiopian security forces picked up journalist Sileshi Hagos at his home, local journalists told CPJ. A contributor to the Addis Ababa-based radio station 96.3 FM, Hagos was the former managing director of the now-defunct political monthly magazineChange, which used to cover the banned political group Ginbot 7 before it wasdesignated a terrorist organization. He is also the fiancé of journalist Reeyot Alemu, who has been imprisoned under terrorism charges since July, according to CPJ research. Authorities interrogated Hagos and confiscated his laptop shortly after they arrested Alemu, local journalists said.
Eskinder Nega (Awramba Times)
Eskinder Nega (Awramba Times)
On Wednesday afternoon, security forces also picked up journalist and dissident blogger Eskinder Nega, local journalists told CPJ, adding that they suspected some of Nega's latest writings, including a column criticizing the government's arrest of the famed Ethiopian actor Debebe Eshetu on terrorism charges, triggered his arrest.
"In the past four months, authorities have used sweeping terrorism laws to detain six independent journalists in an attempt to wipe out the few critical voices left in the country," said CPJ East Africa Consultant Tom Rhodes. "If the authorities have credible evidence against any of these journalists, let them present it publicly. Otherwise, they must release them."
Shortly after Hagos and Nega were arrested, the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front-controlled state television portrayed them as "spies for foreign forces" and accused them of harboring links with Ginbot 7. In an interview with Agence France-Presse, government spokesman Shimelis Kemal accused the journalists, and the activists detained with them, of plotting "a series of terrorist acts that would likely wreak havoc."
Hagos and Nega were presented in court on Thursday and remanded into police custody until October 12 to allow the police to carry out their investigations, local journalists told CPJ. Police specifically forbade visitors in the courtroom when Nega was in court, local journalists told CPJ.
Nega and his wife, Fasil, were imprisoned for 17 months on antistate charges for their critical coverage of the brutal government repression of peaceful protests following the disputed 2005 elections, according to CPJ research. Both were eventually acquitted andreleased in April 2007, but authorities have since blocked them from restarting new newspapers.


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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Mozambique African compassionate Sep 16,2011 - YouTube

ETV 8PM Sport News - Sep 16,2011 - YouTube: ""

'via Blog this'

Ethiopia continue accusing brings Charges against Andualem, Eskinder and other Terror Suspects - YouTube

Ethiopia revealed Detail Charges against Andualem, Eskinder and other Terror Suspects - YouTube: ""

'via Blog this'

Ethiopia arrests five for plotting 'terrorist' acts AFP

ADDIS ABABA — Ethiopian authorities arrested four opposition members and one journalist suspected of plotting attacks on state security, the government said Thursday.

Prominent opposition leader Andualem Arage and journalist Eskinder Nega were among those arrested Wednesday, government spokesperson Shimeles Kemal said.

"The five were involved in staging a series of terrorist acts that would likely wreak havoc," Shimeles told AFP.

He added that the suspects were connected to the outlawed group Ginbot 7, whose leader Berhanu Nega, a former mayor of Addis Ababa, lives in exile in the United States.

Andualem told reporters last week that the regime was tightening its grip on the opposition.

"So long as you are not part of the regime you will be labelled a terrorist," said Andualem, the secretary general of opposition party Unity for Democracy and Justice.

"No one can trust them," he added.

There has been a spate of similar arrests in recent weeks. Last month, 31 people suspected of involvement in subversive activities were detained.

Amnesty International said the recent arrests were a "deeply worrying trend."

"The government is clearly using their authority to stifle the last remains of freedom of expression," Amnesty's Ethiopia researcher Claire Beston told AFP by phone from London.

"The government seems to react to the smallest seed of dissent which makes a mockery of the democratic process," she added.

Shimeles vowed the government would continue arrests so long as suspected terrorists continue to plot attacks.

"If they continue to carry out their attacks the police shall take the maximum caution to prevent any probable damage," he said.

Ginbot 7 is labelled a "terrorist" organisation under Ethiopian law. Its founder Berhanu was arrested in 2005 for allegedly attempting to overthrow the government and was sentenced to death in absentia in 2009.

Ethiopian journalist flees after named in WikiLeaks | The New Age Online

An Ethiopian journalist identified in a diplomatic cable released last month by WikiLeaks has fled after being questioned by authorities, a media rights watchdog said Thursday.

Argaw Ashine was questioned last week by government authorities followed by police interrogation, after he was named in leaked 2009 US diplomatic cables, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said.

It is the "first instance CPJ has confirmed in which a citation in one of the cables has caused direct repercussions for a journalist", it said in a statement.

Ashine was questioned over comments made to US officials concerning reported government plans "to silence the now-defunct Addis Neger, then the country's leading independent newspaper", the Washington-based group said.

"Ashine fled Ethiopia over the weekend," it said in a statement, criticising the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks for its mass release of documents without removing sensitive names.

"He has requested that his current location not be disclosed for safety reasons."

Ethiopian government spokesman Bereket Simon told AFP that the statement by CPJ "cannot be true".

"In the first place, no official has asked him to disclose his source and in the second place no official can ask him to disclose a source under Ethiopian law," he said.

"We have no problem in accepting him back, he has the right to live in Ethiopia," the spokesman went on.

Ethiopia is one of Africa's most restrictive countries for media, according to the watchdog.

"A citation in one of these cables can easily provide repressive governments with the perfect opportunity to persecute or punish journalists and activists," said CPJ director Joel Simon.

Ashine wrote for several publications including Kenya's Nation Media Group.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Swedish journalists charged with terrorism in Ethiopia Youtube : (News in Amharic) - YouTube

Ethiopia charges Swedish journalists with terrorism : (News in Amharic) - YouTube: ""

Two Swedish Journalists Charged With Terrorism in Ethiopia, Minister Says - Bloomberg

Ethiopia charged two Swedish journalists with terrorism after detaining them in July with rebels in the Ogaden region, State Minister of Communications Shimeles Kemal said.

Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye appeared in court yesterday, Shimeles said in a telephone interview from Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, today. Prosecutors have a video showing the journalists handling guns, he said.

“They have entered the country with a bunch of terrorists,” the minister said. “They have even taken weapons training. Their activity is a bit more than mere journalistic activity.”

The journalists will be tried for engaging in terrorism, assisting a terrorist organization and entering the country illegally, Shimeles said. They were detained with members of the Ogaden National Liberation Front, which has been fighting since 1984 for self-determination of Ogaden, located in a province that borders Somalia.

The Swedish Foreign Ministry hasn’t received official notification of the charges, Teo Zetterman, a spokesman for the department, said in a telephone interview from Stockholm today.

Ethiopia also brought terrorism charges against two ONLF members and three other journalists, including Elias Kifle, who runs the Washington-based Ethiopian Review website and Woubshet Taye, the deputy editor of the Addis Ababa-based Awramba Times.

“He is innocent, everybody is innocent, it is clear,” Awramba Times’s editor, Dawit Kebede, said in a phone interview today. “I believe it’s a systematic way to put pressure on our newspaper.”

To contact the reporter on this story: William Davison in Addis Ababa atwdavison3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net

Friday, September 2, 2011

WikiLeaks publishes full cache of unredacted cable guardian.co.uk

WikiLeaks publishes full cache of unredacted cables

Former media partners condemn WikiLeaks' decision to make public documents identifying activists and whistleblowers

WikiLeaks logo
WikiLeaks has published its full archive, including diplomatic cables marked by the US to indicate sources could be in danger. Photograph: Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images
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WikiLeaks has published its full archive of 251,000 secret US diplomatic cables, without redactions, potentially exposing thousands of individuals named in the documents to detention, harm or putting their lives in danger.

The move has been strongly condemned by four previous media partners – the Guardian, New York Times, El Pais and Der Spiegel – who have worked with WikiLeaks publishing carefully selected and redacted documents.

"We deplore the decision of WikiLeaks to publish the unredacted state department cables, which may put sources at risk," the organisations said in a joint statement.

"Our previous dealings with WikiLeaks were on the clear basis that we would only publish cables which had been subjected to a thorough joint editing and clearance process. We will continue to defend our previous collaborative publishing endeavour. We cannot defend the needless publication of the complete data – indeed, we are united in condemning it.

"The decision to publish by Julian Assange was his, and his alone."

Diplomats, governments, human rights charities and media organisations had urged WikiLeaks's founder, Assange, not to publish the full cache of cables without careful source protection.

The newly published archive contains more than 1,000 cables identifying individual activists; several thousand labelled with a tag used by the US to mark sources it believes could be placed in danger; and more than 150 specifically mentioning whistleblowers.

The cables also contain references to people persecuted by their governments, victims of sex offences, and locations of sensitive government installations and infrastructure.

WikiLeaks has published its full archive in an easily accessible and searchable manner, the first time the content has been made widely available to those without sophisticated technical skills.

It conducted a poll of its Twitter followers to decide whether to publish the documents, which it initially said was running at "100 to one" in favour of publishing. WikiLeaks did not disclose the final tallies, nor how many individuals responded to its poll.

Reporters Without Borders, a press freedom group which had been maintaining a backup version of the WikiLeaks site, revoked its support for the whistleblowing site in the wake of the decision.

"Some of the new cables have reportedly not been redacted and show the names of informants in various countries, including Israel, Jordan, Iran and Afghanistan," it said in a statement. "While it has not been demonstrated that lives have so far been put in danger by these revelations, the repercussions they could have for informants, such as dismissal, physical attacks and other reprisals, cannot be neglected."

The whistleblowing website began releasing the cables in December 2010, in conjunction with five media organisations including the Guardian. The mainstream news organisations carefully selected cables and before publication removed any information which could lead to sensitive sources being identified.

WikiLeaks claimed its disclosure was prompted after conflicts between Assange and former WikiLeaks associates led to one highlighting an error made months before. When passing the documents to the Guardian, Assange created a temporary web server and placed an encrypted file containing the documents on it. The Guardian was led to believe this was a temporary file and the server would be taken offline after a period of hours.

However, former WikiLeaks staff member Daniel Domscheit-Berg, who parted acrimoniously with WikiLeaks, said instead of following standard security precautions and creating a temporary folder, Assange instead re-used WikiLeaks's "master password". This password was then unwittingly placed in the Guardian's book on the embassy cables, which was published in February 2011.

Separately, a WikiLeaks activist had placed the encrypted files on BitTorrent, a peer-to-peer file sharing network, in the hours before Julian Assange was imprisoned pending extradition proceedings in December 2010, as a form of insurance for the site. Fewer than five people knew of the existence of the site.

As former activists' disillusionment with WikiLeaks grew, one told German magazine Freitag about the link between the publicly available password and files in an attempt to highlight sloppy security at WikiLeaks. The magazine published the story with no information to identify the password or files.

WikiLeaks then published a series of increasingly detailed tweets giving clues about where the password might be found as part of its attempts to deny security failings on its own part. These are believed to have led a small group of internet users to find the files, which were published in a difficult-to-access format requiring significant technical skill, on rival leak site Cryptome.

Domscheit-Berg, often referred to as Assange's former deputy at WikiLeaks, condemned the password reuse. "The file was never supposed to be shared with anyone at all," he said. "To get a copy you would usually make a new copy with a new password. He [Assange] was too lazy to create something new."

WikiLeaks