Middle East: Webcams Now Weapons of Mass Communication

Via a new citizen website, TalkBackTV MidEast, bloggers and activists in the Middle East can now openly criticize televised news. The site allows individuals to publish video commentary in split-screen, alongside video of the original news story. Although in its infancy, TalkBackTV MidEast is already facilitating the free exchange of ideas, allowing citizens with on-the-ground experience to contribute to news reports, question media coverage, and lampoon politicians.

Young TalkBackTV users in action

Photo: Young TalkBackTV users in action

TalkBackTV began in the United States as a place for people who liked yelling at their televisions to share the screen with pop culture figures like Oprah and Bill O’Reilly. In both branches of the site viewers pick a clip from a media database, record their rants on web cam, and publish the resulting split-screen video.

The Middle Eastern branch was launched in June; the first video posts went up in September. Since then users have published responses to news reports covering the Arab revolutions, Egyptian elections, and Qaddafi’s death, among other stories. TalkBackTV MidEast says its mission is to promote freedom, democracy, transparency, and human rights in countries where criticizing the government can be considered a crime against the state.

TalkBackTV MidEast says it advocates a community built on “resistance, intelligence, dialog and honesty.”

A user criticizes the “backwardness” of women being granted suffrage in Saudi Arabia before they can drive themselves to the grocery store:

The hypocrisy of Qaddafi’s death:

The death of Essam Attah:

Video: Journalist Mona Eltahawy Recounts Beating, Sexual Assault By Egyptian Forces

Photo: Egyptian-American journalist Mona Eltahawy talks to Democracy Now

Egyptian-American journalist, Mona Eltahawy, was detained for 12 hours by Egypt’s security forces last Wednesday (November 23) near Cairo’s Tahrir Square, during which time she was brutally beaten and sexually assaulted. She has just returned from Cairo and agreed to give an interview to Democracy Now.

“So many people in Tahrir Square came up to me and would kiss my forehead,” Eltahawy said. “They would give me a hug and they would say, ‘We’re not going to let them get away.’ They would say, ‘We’re going to snatch Egypt back from them.’ I’ve come back with so many messages of love and support from Tahrir. I feel like Tahrir’s spirit is going to help my arms heal even quicker. This is for Egypt. People have lost eyes. People have been killed, people have lost loved ones,” says Eltahawy. “What happened to me is minuscule compared to that. I have a voice in the media — they don’t. So I want to use that voice to get across to the world that our revolution continues.”

Yesterday Egypt held its first round of parliamentary elections to elect a new, post-Mubarak government in the wake of fierce clashes between protesters and police that lasted for nine days and left at least 42 people dead and more than 3,000 wounded across the country.

Watch Democracy Now’s interview with Eltahawy below:

RUSH TRANSCRIPT

AMY GOODMAN: The first round of parliamentary elections are underway in Egypt today. Voters a going to the polls to elect a new post-Mubarak government. One of Egypt’s Presidential candidates, Amr Moussa, cast his ballot and stressed that there’s a real appetite for democracy in Egypt.

AMR MOUSSA: This is the beginning of a new era in Egypt, Democracy in action. Not in theory but in action.

REPORTER: What do you think, after the elections, should be done if the people still [UNINTELLIGIBLE]

AMR MOUSSA: What is that?

REPORTER: If the people remain in Tahrir Square, what do you think about after the elections? What should be done after the elections?

AMR MOUSSA: Well, after the elections you will have a parliament, you will have your deputies that you have elected yourself. But, if you want to go to Tahrir and express another point of view, why not? This has to be a free country, but disciplined afterwards.

REPORTER: And finally, what should the military [UNINTELLIGIBLE]—-I heard you’ve been at times with them so what’s the final things you be happen after?

AMR MOUSSA: We have reached an agreement, very important one, that the old elections, including the presidential elections would come to an end before the beginning of July. So by the thirtieth day of June, all of the elected officials should be in place and start the new era in Egypt, in the government of Egypt.

AMY GOODMAN: One of Egypt’s presidential candidates, Amr Moussa, speaking with reporters as he cast his ballot in today’s parliamentary election. He’s not actually running for president today in these elections.

These elections are being held in the wake of fierce clashes between protesters and police last week that lasted for nine days, left at least 42 people dead, more than 3,000 wounded across the country. It marked the worst violence in Egypt since Mubarak’s ouster. Thousands of protesters have launched a mass sit-in in Tahrir Square in front of the Parliament in downtown Cairo, to call for the ruling military council to step down and hand over power to a civilian government. Many of the protesters are boycotting the elections.

Well, for more, we go to a Egyptian American journalist Mona Eltahawy. She was detained by Egypt’s security forces last Wednesday near Cairo’s Tahrir Square. She was taken to the Interior Ministry, detained for 12 hours, during which time she was brutally beaten and sexually assaulted. While in captivity, she tweeted, “Beaten arrested in interior ministry.” Mona Eltahawy is just returned from Cairo last night and we are very glad that she at least is in condition enough to be with us in studio. Although, you have cast on both your arms, Mona. Welcome to Democracy Now!, tell us exactly what happened.

MONA ELTAHAWY: Thanks for having me, Amy. It was on Wednesday night when I went along with an activist friend of mine to Mohammed Mahmud Street, which was the front line between where protesters had been in a standoff in clashes with security forces. Soon after we arrived on the front line, they started shooting. So, we took cover in what we thought was a safe area. But, we realize now that we’d been entrapped by government agents on our side of the barrier, because they basically held on to us. I didn’t realize that the time, until my activist friend told me in recording his own arrest. They held on to as until riot police came on to our side of the barrier and took my friend away and surrounded me. I was surrounded by four or five riot police. And they just brutally beat me with their sticks. They had these huge sticks. They’re known for their brutality.

In trying to protect myself, they broke my arm, here, and my hand, there. Then they dragged into a no-man’s land in between where the protesters stand and where the security forces are, and that’s where the sexual assault happened. It was just hands all over me, on my breasts, in between my legs. I lost count of the number of hands trying to get into my jeans, all while I was being beaten. My hair, they were pulling my hair. They were calling me a whore, a daughter of a whore. And then they managed to drag me all the way into the Interior Ministry where the assaults continued to happen until someone from the military said, “Take her inside,” and then I was held inside the Ministry of Interior for five to six hours on pretext that they wanted to verify my identity. But, you don’t take six hours to verify someone’s identity. And then I was handed over to military intelligence where I was blindfolded for two or five hours, and again the pretext of verifying my identity.

When I look back now, I think what actually happened—or I’m guessing, but this is the thing that makes the most sense to me—is that, while at the Interior Ministry, they looked at my files, and like many journalists in Egypt, I had many files in there. And they realized they had a journalist that had written a lot against the previous regime. I’ve exposed a lot of human rights violations. They know my position on the revolution. So, I think they were probably trying to figure out during those twelve hours, am I more trouble with them or more trouble free? And I would say, as much pain as I was in, they wouldn’t get me medical treatment. They counted on the wrong thing, because ever since they released me, I’ve just been on a campaign to shame and expose them.

AMY GOODMAN: Explain who exactly who they were.

MONA ELTAHAWY: Well, the ones who beat me and sexually assaulted me are the riot police, and they are conscripts, basically. They’re kind of the lowest ranking soldiers, if you like, of the Ministry of the Interior, and they are the ones on the front line with protests. They are the ones that basically unleashed—the Ministry of the Interior unleashes them on protesters because they’re just like automatons. All they do is beat. And with women, the sexual violence with women is really important here, because the Mubarak regime began this horrendous policy of targeting female activists and journalists because they wanted to shame us, they wanted to silence us. So, it started then in 2005. But, then the military now—right now, Mubarak is not in charge anymore. It’s the military , the Supreme Council of Armed Forces. They too have used sexual violence against women. In March, they subjected at least 17 activists to so-called virginity tests, which are sexual assaults. And now here again—who’s in charge of Egypt? Again, it’s this military junta. So, they are in charge of whatever the Ministry of the Interior and the police do. Even under military rule now, the same kind of violence we experienced under Mubarak, and sometimes worse, is still being unleashed on Egyptians.

So, at the end of the day, you have to look back and say, look, we started this revolution in January against police brutality amongst many other things, and that brutality continues, which says to me that the Supreme Council of Armed Forces has failed at leading Egypt, and it must step aside immediately. That’s exactly what the protesters at Tahrir Square are demanding.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, talk about this; what has taken place over the weekend. The level of violence. Sharif Abdel Kouddous has been reporting through the weekend. The number of people killed and wounded.

MONA ELTAHAWY: It is horrendous. As you mentioned, almost 40 people killed and thousands injured. I am just one of many thousands. There many other Egyptians out there that you don’t hear of. So, this is just a symbol of that violence. It started out as a peaceful protest against expanding army rule. The army along with the police invaded Tahrir Square and violently tried to break it up, killed several people, burnt tents. And it was in reaction to that the violent invasion of Tahrir Square that activists and protesters then went on to Muhammad Mahmud Street, which is where I was taken, because that street is the street along which they came from the Interior Ministry. The sadism—-it’s just sadistic, Amy. They have been targeting people’s heads. Human-rights groups have documented that they have been deliberately targeting the head so they can get the eye. Lots of activists have lost one or both eyes. It’s just horrendous what they’re doing.

AMY GOODMAN: Who is in control?

MONA ELTAHAWY: Well, supposedly, the Supreme Council of Armed Forces, and the head of which is Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi. He used to be Mubarak’s Defense Minister. He’s now the head of that supreme council. Now, I call that council the Supreme Council of Mubarak’s, because we’ve basically replaced one Mubarak with 18 Mubaraks. They’re all Mubarak’s men. They rose through the ranks of military with Mubarak, and here is his former Defense Minister. Mubarak is 83, this man is 81. Like one of the activists in Tahrir Square said, he is older than her grandfather. And they were supposed to hand over power to a civilian leadership in Egypt in September. They claimed they were the guardians of the revolution because they didn’t shoot, they didn’t open fire on Egyptians during those 18 days. But, all that time they were detaining, they were torturing, subjecting people to virginity tests. We have this saying in Egypt that the army and the people are one hand. Well, I tell everyone now that they’ve broken my hand, and they’ve broken the hands of many Egyptians, and that kind of relationship is definitely severed. More and more ordinary Egyptians, even those not involved in the revolution have been watching the violence that the military and police have unleashed on people and are are realizing that the military is not the guardian of the revolution, but that the military is trying to hijack our revolution.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about the significance of what’s happening, these elections. Who’s boycotting, who’s not, what the demands are of the people in Tahrir Square.

MONA ELTAHAWY: Right, well, the Tahrir Square demands have been the ones that have been there all along since January 25th and that is the revolutionary demands that include civilian leadership for Egypt and an end to state-endorsed violence and brutality against protesters, a demand for justice for the families of the martyrs during the 18 days of the initial uprising. But, also families who’ve lost loved ones all the way up until this past week. No one has stood trial for shooting and killing people during those 18 days that got rid of Mubarak. And also an end to military trials. 12,000—at least 12,000 civilians have stood before military tribunals in Egypt on various charges. Now, civilians should not have to go under military tribunal. So, there’s a whole host of very very clear demands. Now, what has happened over the past week, and because of expanding military rule and because of the idea that the military and the Islamists, especially— the Islamic groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafees, are recognized as the most organized, especially the Muslim Brotherhood. And a lot of people worry the Islamist groups, like the Muslim Brotherhood, have entered into an accommodation deal with the military. So, a lot of people who do not identify with Islamists have decided to boycott the elections. But, also some people have decided to boycott the elections because of this violence last week, and because very prominent activists like blogger Alaa Abd El Fattah, who’s one of the most well known in Egypt, are still behind bars on trumped up charges. So, it’s a confusing time. It’s a very violent time.

AMY GOODMAN: Although, It does seem like the turnout is quite high today for these elections.

MONA ELTAHAWY: I would say the majority of the Egyptians are not boycotting. I think that those who are boycotting are probably a hardcore group of a smaller number of activists. But, I think that you’re seeing this array of voices in Egypt, that you’re seeing people turn out for our first post-January 25th elections with this hunger to vote and to take part in rebuilding the country. This is what gives me hope.

AMY GOODMAN: It’s difficult to see you here talking about what gives you hope with your hands in full casts and one of your fingers—-one of your hands is semi-blue, as I’m looking at you with these casts. So, how do you feel hopeful?

MONA ELTAHAWY: I feel hopeful because the people who did this to me are not Egypt. The people who did this to me are the part of Egypt, or is the group that has occupied Egypt for so many decades now, that we are trying to get rid of. We are continuing our revolution. We will not allow them to hijack our revolution. And I’m optimistic because of the the Egypt that signed my cast. So many people in Tahrir Square came up to me and they would kiss my forehead, they would give me a hug, they would say we’re not going to let them get away. They would say, we’re going to snatch Egypt back from them. And I’ve come back with so many messages of love and support from Tahrir, I feel like Tahrir’s spirit is going to help my arms heal even quicker. This is for Egypt. I mean, people have lost eyes. People have been killed. People have lost loved ones. What happened to me is minuscule compared to that. I have a voice in the media they don’t, so, I want to use that voice to get across to the world that our revolution continues.

AMY GOODMAN: Mona Eltahawy, the young women who are in the square now, people you talk to afterwards, how are women faring today?

MONA ELTAHAWY: Women are fighting. We’re kicking and screaming and shouting. Women have been part of this revolution from the very beginning. And women are demanding that whoever wins these elections, whoever gets the parliamentary majority, recognizes that women are integral to this process. Our revolution will not succeed unless women are taken into account every step of the way, because a lot of people, including myself, worry that if Islamist groups do as well as they’re expected to, the already increasing levels of conservatism in Egypt will rise even more. I fully believe that conservatism harms women the most. So, with the feminists groups on the ground that I know, and the activists I know on the ground, I’m very closely monitoring the situation and going back and forth between here and Egypt to contribute whatever I can to that growing chorus of women’s voices saying, this revolution will not succeed without us. Women are a central part of this revolution. The sad thing is, we’ve and fighting on many fronts. We fight along with the men. We fight against the military and the counterrevolution. We fight the teargas. We fight the police brutality, but we fight, what I call this fourth enemy which is sexual violence. And a sexual violence that is deliberately targeted at women to try to silence us.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, the Obama administration and its stance when it came to Mubarak holding on to the end, but now continuing, well, the military in Egypt receives some of the highest amount of aid in the world, $1.3 billion a year.

MONA ELTAHAWY: Absolutely. The amount of aid the United States gives the Egyptian comprises 45% of its budget.

AMY GOODMAN: Egypt’s budget.

MONA ELTAHAWY: Of the Egyptian military’s budget, 40% of which comes from the U.S. The U.S. administration and all those other governments that support the military rulers of Egypt now, have to also be held accountable for what’s happening because it’s the tear gas that they provide the security forces with, that they sell them, the weapons that they sell them, and the money they give them an aid that they use to buy these weapons, are what has led to this and the at least 40 killed and the hundreds killed during the revolution and the thousands upon thousands who are in jail. The U.S. administration has lagged behind every step of the way. Their statements have been incredibly slow and incredibly ineffectual, and they must recognize that Egyptians realize that they’re one of the best friends of the military junta that is trying to destroy our revolution.

AMY GOODMAN: Mona Eltahawy, I want to thank you very much for being with us. Egyptian born columnist, journalist, she just returned from Cairo last night. Both of her hands are in casts.

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN DEMOCRACY NOW

Mesfin Negash: “We shouldn’t give the dictators what they want, which is our silence at home and abroad.”

Mesfin Negash calls himself a journalist and refuses to be tagged political, activist, or opponent. Since 2001 he has written and edited in-depth analysis, interviews, features, and essays that have criticized Ethiopia’s government as well as its opposition. In 2007 along with five colleagues, he founded the newspaper Addis Neger (New Affairs), which under his direction grew to be one of Ethiopia’s leading newspapers.

Two years after its opening, Addis Neger, as any other independent media outlet in Ethiopia, faced intimidation and harassment as a consequence of Ethiopia’s anti-terrorism law. This law criminalizes any reporting that directly or indirectly “encourages” or provides “moral support” to “terrorist groups.” It has become the biggest threat for the country’s journalists as the government deems what is “encouraging” and labels what a “terrorist group” is.

Despite the law, Addis Neger maintained its policy of covering all the actors of its society, including the opposition, and scrutinized official documents of the ruling party and policies. That was the tipping point for the government to charge the Addis Neger staff with terrorism and force them into exile. Negash was officially charged by the government for “terrorism, treason, and espionage” in early November with another twenty-three defendants, six of them journalists.

Negash was recommended to Sampsonia Way by the staff of Committee to Protect Journalists. Now living in exile in Sweden, and after several technical problems with Skype, he talked with us about the effect of the anti-terrorism law on Ethiopian journalism, the law’s hand in the exile of Addis Neger’s staff, and denies the validity of the government’s charges against him. Negash also talked about his difficulties living and publishing in exile, and analyzes the Wikileaks cables that exposed his colleague to persecution.

Why did you decide it was time to leave Ethiopia?

Because we, the three founding editors that were still living in the country (Girma Tesfaw, Masresha Mamo and myself), confirmed that the government was preparing to charge us for promoting terrorism and supporting terrorist organizations. The government had a grudge against us and they decided to do something to silence us before the election in May 2010. We had very credible sources within the government and the diplomatic community for this information.

Before we decided to leave, the government tried to take us to court and started a smear campaign against our newspaper so that the public would associate us with so-called “terrorist organizations.” There were a series of articles and programs on government media outlets designed to sensitize the public so that when they finally arrested us it wouldn’t come as a surprise.

Can you give me an example of something that Addis Neger published that the government was not pleased with?

It was a cumulative effect, not a single article, that put us in danger. Addis Neger was more analytical than the other media outlets. We didn’t use the tabloid style of reporting. We wrote in-depth analysis, interviews and so on. Our paper focused on hardcore national issues.

We questioned the constitutionality of the laws approved by parliament that worked to weaken independent voices; the illegitimate, but calculated, confusion between party and government structures; the abuse of government policies and resources for personal and party benefit; the repression of independent political parties, citizen societies, journalists, and human rights activists. We also focused on diplomatic relations, given the fact that Ethiopia has a strategic importance for both the west and the east, including China.

We wrote heavily about the economic impact of these policies and diplomatic relations on the public and the education system. These topics were our main focus, contrary to most Ethiopian papers. We were very honest! We tried to give credit to the government when it performed something positive, but in most cases the articles were very damaging for them.

Even though the newspaper was critical of the ruling party, we were also courageous and balanced enough to give a regular column to one active member of the party. We gave him a full page every week to write whatever he liked, supporting or justifying his party and criticizing the opposition, et cetera. He was a regular contributor since the launch of our paper. Addis Neger was the first independent newspaper to bring in a member of the ruling party as a regular contributor. Because we were committed to have the ruling party’s view for the benefit of our readers, when the first contributor stopped writing we found another party member to write the column.

Another point of focus at Addis Neger was covering the most significant opposition groups at home and abroad. This includes the opposition coalition forum MEDREK and its members, Ginbot 7 and Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), two of the organizations designated as terrorist by the government…

The major political opposition parties in Ethiopia.

Right. The leader of Ginbot 7, Dr. Berhanu Nega, is now in exile in the United States. We wrote a feature about his organization. To the government, we were promoting them, but we hadn’t endorsed them. Actually, we have every right to write whatever we like—it’s normal in any civilized nation for a newspaper to endorse this party or that party on its editorial page. We didn’t do that, we only covered them. We were even critical of Ginbot 7 in some of those editorials. That didn’t protect us from being associated with a “terrorist” organization and the allegations of promoting “terrorists.” The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) and the OLF were other groups deemed off-limits by the government. We published stories about all of these organizations, but I never considered it a crime.

We also reported on the repression and systematic infiltration of labor unions, professional associations, NGOs, and the indoctrination of students and civil servants—something that was only common in former Soviet Bloc countries. We focused on how the ruling TPLF [Tigrayan Peoples' Liberation Front] manipulates ethnic politics at the cost of Ethiopian nationalism. Of course, we also had a number of very critical articles against the opposition. It is there, anyone can read that.

The other very important topic, which aggravated relations with the government and our newspaper, is that we began to expose the inherent totalitarian nature of the regime. In most cases they wanted to cover it up with rhetoric. We uncovered their old documents—that in most cases are not accessible to the public—to understand how they see Ethiopian politics, society, and history. It was surprising, even for us. It became definitive that the Prime Minister and the cronies around him are not in power to bring democracy to Ethiopia. This became a kind of second-revelation for the opposition later on, and made the government very angry.

Another concern of the government was the symbolic significance of Addis Neger and its staff. Addis Neger created a solid readership among many educated young Ethiopians. The elite from different sections of society became our regular readers, informants, and supporters. We were only one embodiment of the demand for true political reform. There were readers who started regular group discussions inspired by our writings. There were incidents where members of the ruling party questioned their leaders based on what they read in our newspaper. In short, Addis Neger began to inspire people to think, discuss, debate and demand change in different forms. To be honest, this has never been our goal in doing journalism, but I am proud of it. What better gift can you give than inspiration? So the government decided to do something with us.

“We hear how Gaddafi was a dictator, how Mugabe is a dictator. The Ethiopian regime, in some instances, is worse than them!”

How you were able to get out of Ethiopia? Who helped you and where did you go? How about your family?

I can only say that I was in Uganda before I came to Sweden because that is already in public domain. I had people facilitate my safe exit from Ethiopia and travel to Uganda. I must keep their names for now. My wife and mother are still in Ethiopia.

How was your stay in Uganda before you ended up in Sweden?

During my stay in Uganda I was imprisoned and harassed by the police. It was no safer for me in Uganda than it was in Ethiopia. Since the July 2010 terrorist attack in Kampala, the situation has become very difficult for Ethiopians. At the time the Ugandans had invited the Ethiopian government into the investigation of that attack and Ethiopian security agents were in full force in Uganda. It became very simple for the Ethiopian forces to arrest, and in some cases torture, Ethiopian refugees in Uganda under the guise of “investigation” and combating “terrorism.”

IGAD [Intergovernmental Authority on Development in the Horn of Africa] had also signed regional conventions on extradition and mutual legal assistance in line with the United Nations’ Global Terrorism Strategy. This means Uganda and Ethiopia now exchange criminals and terrorists. Given Ethiopia’s track record of charging journalists as terrorists, it was very likely that I would be sent back to Ethiopia once I was in Uganda. I was taken in many times and questioned, but none of the questions were about the July terrorist attack. The questions were about whether or not I was working as a journalist in Uganda and who gave me permission to do so. The Ugandan Law of Refugees prohibits refugees from participating in any “political activity” that affects their county of origin. The police told me during the “interrogation” that my activity as a journalist can be considered unlawful and I should stop it or face the consequences. The Ugandan police force is very corrupt and since that second arrest I was repeatedly harassed by police. There was no choice but to give them a bribe so that I didn’t have to spend the night in the police station.

Uganda was not a safe place for me to stay and continue to work as a journalist. I gave notification about these worrisome developments to the United Nations High Commission for refugees and other regulating bodies in Kampala, but they couldn’t help me in any meaningful way. When I had the chance to come to Sweden to attend an international conference on exiled media, I decided to ask for asylum here.

Does Sweden have a system in place for refugees seeking asylum? Is the Swedish community supportive of writers in your position?

So far my asylum case is not yet finalized. I have been waiting for one year. The paradox of the situation is that the Swedish government issued the first statement against the closing of Addis Neger and the editorial staff going into exile, and called for an investigation. The reality, I found after I came here, is disappointing. I cannot apply to bring my family here until my application is approved. They have put me in a remote village far from the nearest city or the capital where many Ethiopians are living. I haven’t found any system here that treats writers, journalists, and human rights activists in any different manner than other refugees. I think greater support from the Swedish community for writers and journalists only happens once you are granted asylum.

However, Swedish chapters of PEN International and RSF wrote letters of support. International and regional organizations such CPJ, HRW, IPI, Front Line, IREX and others also wrote me letters and have given me moral support since I came here.

The authorities here don’t understand the reality in Ethiopia. Either they are indifferent to the plight of Ethiopians or they are deceived by the propaganda, willingly or not. The arrest of two Swedish journalists, rather, shows them a glimpse into the true nature of the Ethiopian government’s regard for journalists and freedom of speech.

Is it possible to publish in Ethiopia while in exile?

We launched our website, www.addisnegeronline.com in May 2010 just before the election in Ethiopia. I am still writing and managing the website along with my colleagues who are in exile all over the world. We are determined not to give what the Ethiopian government wants most from us, which is our silence at home and abroad.

Despite our effort to make it a vibrant media outlet, the website was blocked in Ethiopia, and we have gotten very little support so far. Additionally, the repression at home has a direct bearing on our day-to-day journalistic activity. Our informants at home are afraid because the government is tapping phones and hacking email accounts. This constitutes some of the evidence used to charge the Ethiopian journalists who have been imprisoned recently – we have official reports indicating this.

These days it is very difficult to call someone in Ethiopia and talk freely; they are very afraid! They will say, “We are fine, we are fine. How are you? Ok, goodnight.” You can imagine the effect of these factors on our reporting from exile. We need help so that we can establish a vibrant independent media outlet that will inform Ethiopians and provide anyone abroad with credible information.

As you mentioned, the trial of Swedish journalists Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye began several weeks ago. They were arrested in July and charged with terrorism. They entered Ethiopia illegally through the eastern Ogaden region. Prime Minister Zenawi spoke to a Norwegian newspaper recently, condemning the men as messengers for a terrorist organization. What is your response to the arrest of these men and to Zenawi’s comments?

They entered the country illegally, according to government reports. Entering a country illegally is illegal, no matter the country. The region of Ogaden is closed to all independent journalists, whether they are Ethiopian or not. However, we don’t know which side of the border they were on when they were arrested, whether it was in Somalia or Ethiopia. The journalists admitted that they crossed the border without permit, but it is difficult for me to buy this admission at face value. We must wait for their release to hear their side of the story.

This is another international incident that shows the world the true nature of the Ethiopian regime in Addis Ababa. The regime is manipulating this anti-terrorism mantra to silence dissident voices and reporting.

As for Meles Zenawi’s comment, it is normal for Ethiopians to hear such incriminating comments from him. It is Zenawi who decides the outcome of any politically significant trial in Ethiopia. This was not the first time he has done it, not the last for sure. He is above the courts and rule of law.

Swedish Journalists have rallied to demand the release of their colleagues. Did you participate in that demonstration? Have you been active with the Swedish media in any other way?

I attended the demonstration and added my voice there, demanding their release. I also worked with electronic and print journalists, explaining the reality on the ground in Ethiopia and the possible scenarios involving the fates of Persson and Schibbye.

In June, Woubeshet Taye, the deputy editor of the Amharic-language weekly Awramba Times, and Reyot Alemu, a reporter for the Amharic-language weekly Fitih, were arrested and tried under the anti-terrorism law. Eskinder Neger and Sileshi Hagos were arrested in September. Others were held: Haileyesus Worku, the editor of the state-owned Ethiopian Radio and Television Agency and one of his reporters, Abdulsemed Mohammed, were just released after being held for fifteen months. How can an Ethiopian reporter cover the activities of Ethiopia’s leading opposition figure, Berhanu Nega, or an attack by the ONLF rebels without risking prosecution and imprisonment?

I’d like to explain the intonation of the articles and the anti-terrorism law, regarding freedom of speech. In addition to the official mantra of controlling and preventing terrorism, another sub-text of this anti-terrorism law is silencing dissenting views.

By criminalizing opposition groups, they are also criminalizing any exchange of ideas about these groups. It is a double trap. On the one hand they are criminalizing being a member of said groups and their existence; on the other hand, you can’t even discuss what these organizations stand for, whether their political strategy is bad or not. This is one of the instruments that the government is using to control the flow of information within the country. If an Ethiopian reporter writes about Ginbot 7, OLF, ONLF, or its leaders, he is intentionally taking the risk of being associated with these organizations.

These are Cold War Communist tactics or tactics similar to those used by North Korea. They want to have full control over what the public hears and sees, and ultimately thinks. This is not limited to the media. The government, for example, distributed a guideline for public theaters to influence the content of their plays. The guideline specifically outlines what issues the plays should focus on. We published a feature story regarding this typically communist strategy.

We hear how Gaddafi was a dictator, how Mugabe is a dictator. The Ethiopian regime, in some instances, is worse than them! However, the Ethiopian dictator has one unique quality: He knows what the international community wants to hear and he uses their language. Furthermore, he must be pleased to have a stateless Somalia next door, as the West has become dependent on him to wage the so called “war on terrorism.” They close their eyes to everything happening on the ground.

In September a colleague of yours, Argaw Arshine, fled Ethiopia after Wikileaks released a 2009 U.S. Embassy post that indicated him and an unnamed government official of providing information to the staff at your paper. This incident is what propelled you to close Addis Neger and leave Ethiopia. Have you had contact with him since he left Ethiopia and if so, where is he now?

I do have information about Arshines’ present condition, but I must keep it to myself. It is complicated.

When this information was released Arshine was repeatedly interrogated and forced by police to name his contact in the government. The government claims that questioning of this kind is illegal and he had no reason to flee, but clearly he felt some imminent threat or he wouldn’t have left the country. Is he safe?

He is very safe in an undisclosed location. While still in Ethiopia, he was summoned by the commander of the federal police and was given twenty-four hours to release the name of his government informant. If he had released that person’s name, that person would be in great danger. The government would be very harsh on them to teach a lesson to other potential whistle blowers.

If Arshine had stayed in Ethiopia and refused to give the name, he would have been charged with spying on the government, which is a sentence of potentially ten years or more, not to mention the possibility of being tortured.

Wikileaks has gone on the defense and feigned responsibility for leaking Argaw Ashine’s name. They want the focus to be put back on the repressive Zenawi regime. This has spurred a debate about Wikileaks’ responsibility versus people’s right to information and government transparency. Do you think Wikileaks should be held accountable for failing to protect the names of individuals?

I believe both sides should take their share of the responsibility. The regime in Ethiopia wants to control every source of information. What matters for the government is not whether the report is true or not, but who leaked it.

Wikileaks wants to transfer the blame to The Guardian or the nature of the regime in Ethiopia. No, not at all! One can argue that, in this case, Ashine was acting as a whistle blower, not as a journalist. Therefore Wikileaks is exposing whistle blowers, which is very dangerous; it’s very easy to prosecute whistle blowers in many countries. Thus it is very regrettable that Wikileaks published the cable without editing Ashine’s name. He left his family, his life, his career in Ethiopia and had to start over from zero. He didn’t even have enough time to prepare. After Wikileaks published the cables, Ashine had to be out of the country within a week. After two days he was summoned by the federal police, interrogated, and given an ultimatum. I wonder how the people at Wikileaks can excuse themselves so easily.

We are hoping for a positive outcome for you and your family, and the continuation of your writing.

Thank you. As I said before, we shouldn’t give the dictators what they want, which is our silence whether at home or abroad. Therefore, I will continue writing and inspiring people as much as possible.

The Weekly Digest: Burmese Children on Free Speech, and Fighting Impunity in Africa, Latin America

The Weekly Digest — a round-up of Sampsonia Way‘s top stories — is your source for quality weekend reading. Sign up today and get it delivered every weekend to your inbox.

Burmese children

Video: Burmese Children on Freedom of Expression
For this video, Burmese exiled writer Khet Mar posed two questions to school children living in Rangoon: “Why is it important to say what you want to say?” and “If you could change anything in the world, what would you change?” The video was produced by Arrman, a Burmese video-journalist.

Why fight impunity in Africa and Latin America
To mark IFEX’s International Day to End Impunity, we asked a group of African and Latin American writers who have contributed to Sampsonia Way to write about the importance of fighting impunity in their home countries. We hear from Mesfin Negash (Ethiopia), Tendai Tagarira (Zimbabwe), and Philo Ikonya (Kenya); and from Claudia Méndez Arriaza (Guatemala), Horacio Castellanos Moya (El Salvador), Israel Centeno (Venezuela), and Martin Solares (Mexico).

“Impunity is not only a denial of justice—it’s a denial of the truth.” – Claudia Méndez Arriaza

Video: Ex-New York Times Freelancer Natasha Lennard on Quitting the Corporate Media in an Occupy Era
A Democracy Now interview with former New York Times freelance reporter Natasha Lennard who helped the newspaper cover the initial Occupy protests. Lennard wrote a piece for Salon.com title “Why I Quit the Mainstream Media.”

Iran Authorities Threaten Radio Farda Listeners Via Texting
The audience for Farda, RFE/RL’s Persian-language service, has to contend with a host of threats from the regime in Tehran, which looks to punish its own citizens for listening to free media. Tehran is upping the ante by making its warnings high-tech and personal.

Iran Authorities Threaten Radio Farda Listeners Via SMS

The government in Tehran is doing its best to stamp out free thinking through text messages.

“Dear citizen, based on information we received you have fallen under the influence of the anti-security propaganda of media connected with foreign powers.”

“If you establish contact with media based outside the country, you will be guilty of violating the following articles of Islamic law (…) and we will deal with you according to the law.”

Listening to Radio Farda in Iran is no idle pastime.

The audience for Farda, RFE/RL’s Persian-language service, has to contend with a host of threats from the regime in Tehran, which looks to punish its own citizens for listening to free media. The government’s extreme censorship is nothing new in the annals of authoritarianism. But Tehran is upping the ante by making its warnings high-tech and personal.

The government’s latest way of cheerfully informing Farda’s most active listeners of the risk they’re running is through SMS (text) messages directly to their mobile phones. The messages carry the menacing threats shown above.

Remarkably, despite the intimidation, Farda’s listeners continue to send hundreds of SMS messages daily from all over Iran, risking imprisonment in Iran’s notorious jails, where thousands of political prisoners serve terms and fear secret executions.

These SMS messages are tracked by the Iranian government on a daily basis, according to Mardo Soghom, a senior media market research analyst for RFE/RL.

“We have noted that when the SMS numbers drop to 30-40 a day, which was the case nine months ago, it was due to these text message warnings sent by the Iranian government,” says Soghom.

Constant jamming by the Iranian authorities has not succeeded in discouraging Radio Farda’s journalists, who are officially banned from the airwaves in Iran but continue to broadcast news, features and music in Persian, 24 hours a day.

‘Radio Is Only Radio Farda’

The work of Radio Farda broadcasters is encouraged and validated by the messages sent in from listeners, who often pass along the slogan, “Radio is only Radio Farda.”

Reza, a listener from Kermanshah, recently sent a text message to Radio Farda’s SMS service that read, “All of us are listening to Radio Farda, with the hope for a better Iran tomorrow.” The message played on Radio Farda’s name, which means “Radio Tomorrow” in Persian.

Others write to talk of the unmet promises of Iran’s revolutionary regime. “When the revolution happened, they were blaming the Shah for selling the oil cheaply,” one listener says. “Now, they are not only selling oil and gas, they are even exporting the ‘soil’ of this country and they call it non-oil sector exports.”

For Radio Farda’s journalists, the most rewarding messages are usually the simplest. Writes a listener from Ghazvin, “Long live the one who established Radio Farda.”

To find out more about what is happening inside Iran, read the news in Farsi (or English) on Radio Farda’s website and visit Persian Letters, a blog maintained by RFE/RL senior correspondent Golnaz Esfandiari. Her work is dedicated to uncovering under-reported stories and delivering insight and analysis from bloggers, feminists, clerics and even Basij members inside Iran.

This article was originally published in Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Copyright (c) 2011. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Video: Ex-New York Times Freelancer Natasha Lennard on Quitting the Corporate Media in an Occupy Era

Democracy Now speaks with former freelancer at the New York Times, Natasha Lennard, who helped the newspaper cover the initial Occupy protests. She was arrested during the Brooklyn Bridge demonstration while reporting on the event. She no longer freelances for the Times and recently wrote a piece for Salon.com titled “Why I Quit the Mainstream Media.”



RUSH TRANSCRIPT

AMY GOODMAN: We turn to a reporter who was covering Occupy Wall Street for the New York Times. Juan?

JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, to talk more about the protests, the reporter is Natasha Lennard. She is with us in the studio. She’s a former freelancer at the New York Times who helped the Times cover the initial Occupy protests. She was arrested during the Brooklyn Bridge protest while reporting on the event. She no longer freelances for the Times and recently wrote a piece for Salon.com titled “Why I Quit the Mainstream Media.”

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Natasha, why don’t you tell us what happened? Tell us about your experiences on the Brooklyn Bridge, one of the largest mass protests in U.S. history, more than 700 people arrested. You were swept up, as well?

NATASHA LENNARD: Absolutely. So, I was there that day live reporting for the Times and at the base of the bridge saw a huge surge of hundreds of people at that—at the entrance, taking the bridge, many of whom, I believe, thought they would be permitted because the police did not stop people and indeed seemed to walk along the bridge with protesters on the roadway. I followed the surge of people. That’s where the story was. And about a third of the way in, as many people have heard by now, the police stopped us and then began a, you know, customary mass arrest of 700 people, who now all will probably go to evidentiary trial, having pleaded “not guilty” to any illegal action.

AMY GOODMAN: You showed your credential?

NATASHA LENNARD: I showed my press credential. I had a New York Times identification card, but not an NYPD press card. But as had happened during the eviction a couple of nights ago, press are routinely arrested now in protests, and the credentials, or not credentials, don’t seem to matter. Freedom of the press is very much under threat in these protests, in my view.

JUAN GONZALEZ: But then you became the target of a campaign by Andrew Breitbart and some other notorious now, conservative talk show folks. Could you talk about that?

NATASHA LENNARD: Absolutely. I spoke at a panel at the radical bookstore Blue Stockings in New York’s Lower East Side, talking about strategy and politics of the left with relation to Occupy Wall Street, and at that time was no longer, you know, routinely freelancing for the New York Times. But nonetheless, because of my link to the Times from my arrest, Breitbart found a video—a reporter with Breitbart’s website found a video of my panel discussion in which I quite ardently showed support for the experimental nature of Occupy Wall Street, and they used that to decry me as a non-objective journalist. And as I wrote in Salon this week, I’m not an objective journalist. I, like may hundreds, thousands, millions of people across the country, am quite appalled by the current state of inequality that the system we’re living under has created and would only want to speak in that capacity henceforth.

AMY GOODMAN: After they targeted you, the Times said you would not be writing for them?

NATASHA LENNARD: They released a statement in response to questions from Politico, who followed up the target—not targeting me, but questioning the Times about it. And the Times responded that I would not be used for future Occupy Wall Street coverage, which I believe was somewhat the case anyway, because some of my Twitter feeds had shown subjective support for the movement at large, so it wasn’t exactly a New York Times position.

AMY GOODMAN: You know, so often I do not think it’s about what your position is, since when you watch television with the mainstream journalists, they’re constantly pontificating about what they feel about almost every different issue. It’s what that opinion is. It’s not that you have an opinion.

NATASHA LENNARD: Well, you know, I think there’s a storied history in America’s mainstream press about which opinions become controversial, and you get targeted from expressing them, and which don’t. And I think when it comes to popular movements that question an economic status quo, you know, a target—targets from the right pour in.

AMY GOODMAN: We just saw this tweet by a Guardian reporter, Adam Gabbatt, who said, “I was told ‘no press today, for security reasons’ when tried to get on Wall St.” Your assessment of this two-month anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street protest that you have been covering throughout, for or not for the New York Times?

NATASHA LENNARD: Well, you know, I think what’s amazing about this is that it’s not one homogeneous, monolithic thing. This is a very diffuse, amorphous spread of people taking action and not feeling representative politics, as they stand, are sufficient, and taking their political spaces into their own hands. And I think the press should take their voices into their own hands, too, and I think it’s a shame that people are being barred from reporting on the scene, as seems to be the case too often.

AMY GOODMAN: And we’re going to talk more about that. We’re going to be joined by a New York City Council member who actually went down to observe on the night that the news came down just after midnight that the police were raiding Occupy Wall Street. He was arrested and held for more than 12 hours without being able to reach any attorney. He was also held for two hours in a police van by himself while others were taken out to be arraigned. We’re going to go to Seattle, as well, speak with a former police chief there, and with an 84-year-old actually former mayoral candidate, who was pepper-sprayed in the face. Stay with us.

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN DEMOCRACY NOW

Why is it Important to Fight against Impunity in Ethiopia, Zimbabwe and Kenya?

Today IFEX inaugurates the International Day to End Impunity. The purpose of the day, also promoted in Facebook, is to raise public awareness of impunity and showcase the important work organizations have been doing to fight for justice and freedom of expression worldwide.

In our pages Sampsonia Way has covered many countries where freedom of speech has been attacked, in many cases without legal punishment. Because we understand that impunity is an obstacle for freedom of speech and democracy everywhere, Sampsonia Way contacted writers who have worked with us to write about the importance of fighting impunity in their home countries. Today we reproduce their comments on Africa.

Writers from Zimbabwe and Kenya, and a journalist from Ethiopia (all of whom are now living in exile), explain the dramatic impact impunity has had on their countries. For Philo Ikonya, for example, impunity has built a culture without freedom or basic human rights; a culture where the political elite habitually exploit the poor and the basis of democracy was chewed up and spit out a long time ago.

Mesfin Negash. Ethiopia. Journalist, Addis Neger.

Impunity became a rule in Ethiopia for those with the power to abuse. The first causality of this rampant impunity is freedom of speech. The people in power are using government institutions and laws to muzzle dissenting and critical voices. The international fight against terrorism, as it did in many countries, allows authorities to suppress opposition politicians, activists, and journalists. Ethiopia already charged 11 journalists, including myself, two of them Swedish, for terrorism and related crimes. Despite the fact that no evidence is presented to convince the public that these journalists are actually engaged in a “terrorist” activity, the authorities continue charging and intimidating journalists and writers. Ethiopia became the number one country to force journalists into exile in the last 10 years, and the second “leading jailer” in Africa according to Committee to Protect Journalists. Neither an official nor a government organ is investigated, let alone held responsible, for this continuous systematic attack on freedom of speech and journalists. Those perpetrating this crime in the name of “anti-terrorism,” “national-interest” and “party interest” are rewarded by the regime, and not held responsible.

Freedom of speech and those who dare to exercise it in any manner that displeases the ruling elite will be the victims as long as impunity remains the rule, an unchallenged condition the press has suffered from for 20 years in Ethiopia.

No genuine democratic transition can take place in the absence of freedom of speech and the press. There is no guarantee for the respect of human rights where freedom of speech and expression are not respected and nurtured. Freedom of expression cannot be nurtured where impunity is the rule. Therefore, fighting against impunity is tantamount to fighting for democracy and respect for human rights in Ethiopia.


Tendai “Frank” Tagarira. Zimbabwe. Writer.

The main architect of impunity in Zimbabwe is Robert Mugabe and his henchmen. Mugabe turned Zimbabwe’s once prosperous economy into a basket case. Life expectancy dropped from around 70 years to a mere 39 years by 2008. Unemployment is at an astronomic 95%. Zimbabwe’s inflation topped at 12.3 million percent as the economy took a tailspin under Mugabe’s impunity. Corruption and violation of human rights are rampant in Zimbabwe, but the people in Zimbabwe are tired of impunity. It has cost us dearly and derailed the nation’s progress.

People are afraid to criticize Mugabe’s regime because of its use of brute force, but we must fight this impunity in order to restore honor and dignity to the people of Zimbabwe. We must fight against impunity in order to create a better future, where people are not afraid to raise their opinions. A future where people can vote freely and fairly without fear of intimidation. A future where politicians are accountable for their actions to the people of Zimbabwe. A future of true democracy and sustainable economic prosperity. Enough is enough! Impunity must end and be replaced with love.

Philo Ikonya. Kenya. Poet, novelist.


Impunity is a huge beast. It is Greedy with a capital G and it eats the future of our little ones. It would be an ogre in our traditional stories in Kenya. Trollen in Norway, cruel giants elsewhere. In the fight against impunity, my first port of call is to all of us.

No country can fight against the thieves going unpunished all over the world without international support. Justice is universal. Accountability is not regional. Impunity is a monster that swallows the world entirely when we pretend it does not exist.

In many cases, powerful people who loot their countries hide the money outside of their borders with the help of their “buddies.”

We must not only see it, but do something. We must do what we can today, in our time in history, to end impunity. We must cross borders with the fight. We are not only accountable for the time we live in, but also for the future. Shall we leave the ogre of impunity to eat up our children?

If we believe that there are crimes committed against humanity, we must also have courts that punish impunity anywhere in the world. Universal punishment for crime deters crime inside countries. Impunity is often the play of the powerful. Once the world does not punish crime openly, or reach out to ensure justice, what goes on in some countries is hell.

The world came together in a concrete act against impunity in 2002. The Rome Statute created the International Criminal Court in Den Hague, Netherlands. But the USA, Sudan, and China are not members. The USA unsigned the Rome Statute in George Walker Bush’s time. Russia has signed, but not ratified, the statute. China is opposed to it.

Without such courts, and the international support needed behind them, in most of Africa people can go to the ballot to elect new leaders and die for having voted. Votes are stolen and corrupt regimes perpetuated. Impunity spits out democracy, but that is not all; like a hungry octopus, impunity’s hands reach for everything.

Impunity allows for a class of powerful people who are non-punishable as they continue to plunder, kill, and steal—sometimes through neatly made documents.

Impunity breaks the concept of justice, making it irreparable. When the judiciary in a modern democracy does not function, there is nothing left. There is no recourse. Impunity sees to it that people do not get their due. That those who can bribe their way out, or have the power do it, go scott free. No one is accountable, and the less powerful party, or the poor, end up paying for stolen tax money. With the loss of this money citizens miss out on basic things like food, education, and health care.

The thieves have also kept poor children from the goal of free universal primary education, a United Nations millennium development goal. Think of $47 million meant for free primary education going missing in Kenya. This cannot be done by a poor man who steals a loaf of bread in the streets or a chicken from a farm. Think of any range of stealing in Kenya (punishment for stealing with violence is death) and you see how an ordinary person pays for it immediately. The rich and the powerful go free. The connected are always innocent.

Why is it Important to Fight Against Impunity in Guatemala, El Salvador, Venezuela and Mexico

On November 23 IFEX inaugurates the International Day to End Impunity. The purpose of the day, also promoted in Facebook, is to raise public awareness of impunity and showcase the important work organizations have been doing to fight for justice and freedom of expression worldwide.

In our pages Sampsonia Way has covered many countries where freedom of speech has been attacked, in many cases without legal punishment. Because we understand that impunity is an obstacle for freedom of speech and democracy everywhere, Sampsonia Way contacted writers who have worked with us to write about the importance of fighting impunity in their home countries. Today we reproduce their comments on Latin America.

The human rights organization Equipo Nikzor explains: “Perhaps no word defines the experiences of Latin America as well as impunity…it is, without doubt, one of the gravest problems affecting the continent.” The following comments from writers and journalists from Guatemala, El Salvador, Venezuela, and Mexico explain the impact impunity has had on their societies and their country’s history; their comments also illustrate the importance of fighting impunity—widely considered an underlying cause of violence in Latin America.

Claudia Méndez Arriaza. Journalist, editor for el Periodico. Guatemala

It is important to fight against impunity in Guatemala and elsewhere: From China to France and from Europe to America. I could write a long list of reasons, but once I went to a conference where judges and prosecutors from Guatemala were discussing the topic. One of them, in my opinion, explained with a simple sentence the importance of breaking down the walls of impunity from the past, present, and future. He reminded us that when a crime happens and it is not punished, then it never happened. It’s as simple as that: It never happened. You’re not only playing with justice, you’re playing with the truth.

Think about the thousands of offenses that take place every day in the world. Think about child abuse, murder, fraud, scams, rapes, robberies … Now try to picture the victim’s faces. I have seen those faces. The first fight to overcome in their long road to justice is to make people believe. I always have wondered why, as I was interviewing them, covering their cases in the courts, they would remark: “This is the truth, this really happened to me.”

When they become victims of an offense, not only are courage, honor, dignity, trust, friendship, and love taken away, but the truth is also stolen. The victims seek it when they seek justice. Impunity is not only a denial of justice—it’s a denial of the truth. If a crime is not punished, then it never happened. And what is the consequence if a robbery never happened, if the taking of a life is not acknowledged, if an abuse never occurred? We can not pretend that it won´t happen again. We can argue about the effectiveness of punishment on deterrence, but when we talk about justice we have to bear in mind that the focus is not only on the offender and the offense but on the victim as well.

Impunity is another crime: It is an act of denial. Impunity denies that a terrible act happened, it denies that someone is suffering, it denies that an offender needs attention, and above all, it denies the fact that societies need truth and justice to live in peace.

Horacio Castellanos Moya.Writer and journalist. El Salvador

Impunity is the reflection of a judiciary system that does not work. Impunity is the expression of a society that is not under the rule of law. Most of the time, impunity exits in societies that suffer, or have suffered, dictatorships or long authoritarian or totalitarian regimes. El Salvador experienced a military regime for fifty years and then ten years of civil war. We are talking about sixty years of arbitrariness, killings, and massacres. During this period, military rulers and their rich elite supporters were above the law. They never had to face punishment for the human rights violations they perpetrated.

That pattern creates a culture, a culture of impunity. The idea is very simple: You can kill, you can break the law, and you won’t have to pay anything, because if the powerful can kill and break the law without paying anything, why are you going to be charged? El Salvador now lives in a democracy, but the culture of impunity is older and more powerful.

Israel Centeno. Writer. Venezuela

It is important to fight impunity in any place. An unpunished crime shows a clear absence of justice. We, as Venezuelans, have a long history of impunity, and while the judicial system does nothing, recidivism grows shameless and exponentially. Crime, in its different forms, seems to dominate over everyday events.

The prevalence of corruption, the trafficking of people, weapons and drugs, and other felonies, are reflected in the number of dead and injured reported at the end of every week. This situation is turning Venezuela into one of the most violent countries in the hemisphere, if not of the world. The consequence is serious. Citizens get used to the crime and end up trivializing violence, even displaying some kind of male chauvinist and picturesque “pride” as a result of being part of that chaotic reality.

The fight against impunity is also a fight against other evils. It is a fight against national cynicism, political, financial, and racial exclusion, and the inequality inside a country where—in spite of its oil reserves and social revolution—the financial elite produces and leads the crime in its different aspects. To fight against impunity is to struggle against the figure of the perennial Latin American leader; it is the process of looking inside institutions for independent judges that can apply free justice with a free criterion, and ultimately it is an attack against the causes of poverty and corruption.

Martin Solares. Writer. Mexico

In Mexico the word “justice” is used with less frequency: No one remembers the last time that the Mexican President, a prosecutor, or even a judge promised complete and total justice in a single case.

Words that we use or we stop using are not meaningless objects, they are powerful symbols that explain who we are and what we are becoming. It’s crucial to recover justice in Mexico, otherwise the extortions, the kidnappings and all the abuses will spread to other cities around the world: The organized crime that dominated Tamaulipas, Sinaloa, and Chihuahua is extending to Veracruz, Nuevo León, Texas, California, and Arizona…

The problem is that is impossible to do justice in Mexico if it is not done in tangent with the United States: It’s not enough to punish the murders here, it’s important to punish the arms dealers in the United States as well as the corrupt custom agents and the congressmen who protect the arms sales without considering the consequences. Those who argue in favor of the right to trade guns have forgotten a more powerful right: Every citizen has the right to live without fear, threats, extortion, robberies, and kidnappings.

Video: Burmese Children on Freedom of Expression

Ei Ei Aung: "I should have chance to say what I want."

Today there are over 1,600 political prisoners in Burma. Because they said what they wanted to say, the government considers them enemies.

One month ago, Tint Swe, the head of Burma’s repressive state censorship body told Radio Free Asia that “Press censorship should be abolished in the near future.” And even though the government has released about 200 political prisoners since then, there are still many in jail for speaking their minds.

Not only are the adults unable to speak, their children are growing up in a country where they too can’t say what they want.

Three months ago I asked Arrman, a video journalist inside Burma, to interview five kids in sixth and seventh grade who are living in Rangoon. He asked them two questions: “Why is it important to say what you want to say?” and “If you could change anything in the world, what would you change?” Arrman asked permission from the kids’ parents and didn’t give the kids any instruction but the questions.

One of these kids dreams of an equal society where the line between rich and poor doesn’t exist. Another one believes that everything in his country would be better if each citizen respected their environment. They also want to stop the pollution coming from factories, and they dream -as I did- of waking up without hearing adults talk about the hundreds of people who have lost their lives in wars around the world each day.

“Human beings the world over need freedom and security, that they may be able to realize their full potential,” Aung San Suu Kyi has repeated in many interviews. I wonder how these kids will realize their dreams if freedom and security are not guaranteed in their country –the same country that I grew up in and was forced to leave for the things that I too wanted to say. Will they live in a country where censorship will be a bad memory, as Tint Swe suggested? Or should they leave Burma and live in another country as I do now?

The Weekly Digest: Tarbaby & Oliver Lake, Burma, French Satire, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain

The Weekly Digest — a round-up of Sampsonia Way‘s top stories — is your source for quality weekend reading. Sign up today and get it delivered every weekend to your inbox.

Thaddeus Mosley, Eric Revis, Nasheed Waits, Oliver Lake, Orrin Evans (L to R) Photo: Joe Edgar

Tarbaby Trio and Oliver Lake: Naked on Stage
In this interview conducted by Pittsburgh artist Thaddeus Mosley, the jazz trio discusses the meaning behind the name Tarbaby, how they ended up working with Oliver Lake, and their thoughts on performance (one should be naked up there), while mentioning a veritable catalog of influential jazz musicians, plus their favorite musicians from Pittsburgh.

The Tarbaby Trio and Oliver Lake performed in this year’s Jazz Poetry Concert, a premier cultural event hosted by City of Asylum Pittburgh.

Are Burmese Promises to Abolish Press Censorship Beyond Belief?
“Press censorship should be abolished in the near future,” said the Deputy Director-General of Burma’s Press Scrutiny and Registration Department. To get an insider’s perspective on the censorship chief’s statement, Sampsonia Way contacted Cho Tu Zaw, a Burmese writer and film director, and Maung Wuntha, the editor of the Rangoon-based political journal People’s Era.

‎”[Burmese officials] always talk like this. We will give you press freedom, but you must accept ‘responsibilities’ along with press freedom.”

A cover from satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. Click image to view slide show

Slide Show: French Satirical Magazine Charlie Hebdo
The French satirical magazine was firebombed just before a special edition “guest edited” by the Prophet Muhammad appeared on newsstands. Take a look at a collection of past covers from Charlie Hebdo.

“We are Being Cheated:” Saudi Arabian Filmmakers Detained for Film on Poverty
On October 16th, three video bloggers from Saudi Arabia were detained because of a documentary that they produced on poverty in Al-Jaroudiya, a district in the capital of Riyadh.

Censored: Copwatch France
Copwatch Nord-Paris IDF, a website that publicizes incidents of police brutality and misconduct, has been blocked in France. The site has been charged with defaming and putting at risk the safety of police officers.

Bahrain: Facebook posts are synonymous with illegal assembly, incitement, and disturbing the peace
In Bahrain, the use of Facebook and Twitter have become a convenient digital paper trail for government officials to expel and prosecute perceived offenders and protesters in accordance with Bahraini Emergency Laws.

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