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October 17, 2005
CPJ
Names Shi Tao and Other Winners of International Press
Freedom Awards
Peter Jennings also to be honored in November ceremony
New York, October 17, 2005¨DThe Committee to Protect
Journalists will present its 2005 International Press
Freedom Awards to three journalists and a media
lawyer¨Dfrom Brazil, China, Uzbekistan, and
Zimbabwe¨Dwho have endured beatings, threats,
intimidation, and jail because of their work.
The awards will be presented at CPJ¡¯s 15th annual
awards dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City on
Tuesday, November 22. Here are the awardees:
Galima Bukharbaeva, former Uzbekistan correspondent for
the Institute for War & Peace Reporting, risked her
life covering the killing of hundreds of protestors by
government troops in the city of Andijan in May.
Bukharbaeva, now in exile in the United States, faces
criminal prosecution for her reporting on the Andijan
crisis, police torture, and the repression of Islamic
activists.
Beatrice Mtetwa, a media lawyer, is a tireless defender
of press freedom in Zimbabwe, where the law is used as a
weapon against independent journalists. Despite being
arrested and beaten because of her work, she continues
at great personal risk to defend journalists. She has
won acquittals for several journalists facing criminal
charges, including two London journalists arrested
during April¡¯s tightly controlled presidential
election.
L¨²cio Fl¨¢vio Pinto, publisher and editor of the
bimonthly paper Jornal Pessoal, has courageously
reported on drug trafficking, environmental devastation,
and political and corporate corruption in a vast, remote
region of Brazil¡¯s Amazon. Physically assaulted and
threatened with death, he also faces a constant barrage
of civil and criminal lawsuits aimed at silencing him.
Shi Tao has been a freelance journalist for Internet
publications and an editor for Dangdai Shang Bao, a
Chinese business newspaper. His essays on political
reform, published on news Web sites outside of China,
drew the ire of authorities. Now serving a 10-year
prison sentence for ¡°leaking state secrets abroad,¡±
Shi¡¯s plight highlights China¡¯s intense effort to
control information on the Internet.
CPJ will also honor the late ABC News anchor Peter
Jennings with the Burton Benjamin Memorial Award for a
lifetime of distinguished achievement. Jennings learned
of the award just weeks before his death in August.
During 41 years as correspondent and anchor, Jennings
reported on nearly every historical milestone from every
corner of the world, earning a reputation for
independence and excellence.
¡°These individuals inspire us all,¡± said Paul
Steiger, CPJ board chairman and managing editor of The
Wall Street Journal. ¡°In the face of grave dangers,
they have shown extraordinary bravery, tenacity, and
dedication in defending the free flow of vital
information.¡±
CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said: ¡°All of the
awardees have risked their lives and their freedom to
report the truth about politicians, policies,
businesses, and crime. For their work, these journalists
have been attacked in various ways by powerful people
determined to hide their actions.¡±
The chairman of this year¡¯s awards dinner is Leslie
Moonves, CBS chairman. Clarence Page, Pulitzer
Prize-winning columnist for the Chicago Tribune and CPJ
board member, will host the awards ceremony.
Here are biographical capsules of the winners:
Galima Bukharbaeva has drawn international attention to
the Uzbek government¡¯s authoritarian policies, earning
a reputation as one of Central Asia¡¯s most outspoken
journalists. Her work for the London-based Institute for
War & Peace Reporting focused on sensitive issues
such as police torture, repression of Islamic activists,
and state-sponsored abuses against journalists and human
rights activists. As a result, Bukharbaeva was placed
under police surveillance, denied press accreditation,
and threatened with prosecution. The government
organized Soviet-style ¡°protests¡± in the capital,
Tashkent, denouncing her as a traitor.
Bukharbaeva was one of the few journalists to witness
and report on the May 13 massacre in the northeastern
Uzbek city of Andijan. A bullet tore through her
backpack, piercing her notebook and press pass, when
troops opened fire on demonstrators.
As a result of her reporting, state media accused her of
¡°conducting open information warfare against the
state.¡± Facing government reprisals, she fled the
country and lives in New York City, where she is
studying at the Columbia University Graduate School of
Journalism.
Beatrice Mtetwa, a prominent media lawyer, has defended
many journalists in Zimbabwe who have been detained and
harassed. In a country where the law is used as a weapon
against independent journalists, Mtetwa has defended
journalists and argued for press freedom, all at great
personal risk.
This year, Mtetwa won acquittals for Toby Harnden and
Julian Simmonds, journalists with The Sunday Telegraph
of London, who were arrested outside a polling station
in Zimbabwe during the April presidential election. The
government of President Robert Mugabe, which severely
restricted independent coverage of the vote, had charged
them with working without accreditation.
Mtetwa has worked on behalf of the Daily News,
Zimbabwe¡¯s sole independent daily newspaper until it
was closed by the government in 2003. She continues to
defend the newspaper¡¯s journalists, many of whom face
criminal charges for their work.
In October 2003, Mtetwa was arrested on specious
allegations of drunken driving. She was taken to a
police station, where she was held for three hours,
beaten and choked, then released without charge.
Although she was unable to speak for two days as a
result of the assault, she returned to the police
station on the third day, with medical evidence in hand,
to file charges.
L¨²cio Fl¨¢vio Pinto reports from the lawless and
isolated Amazon region of Brazil, one of the most
dangerous beats in Latin America. As publisher and
editor of Jornal Pessoal in the northern state of Par¨¢,
he covers an area that is almost twice the size of Texas
and is home to corrupt ranchers and land speculators.
He has reported on drug trafficking, environmental
devastation, and political and corporate corruption. In
return, he has been threatened and subjected to a wave
of spurious lawsuits. A powerful local media owner, who
is also a politician, attacked Pinto in a restaurant in
January, beating and kicking him. The assailant¡¯s
bodyguards provided cover during the assault.
Writing columns and directing coverage in his small
bimonthly paper, Pinto has challenged the self-dealing
and domination of a prominent media company. In
retaliation, the company¡¯s principals have unleashed a
barrage of legal complaints.
Judges, politicians, and business owners have also filed
criminal and civil complaints against Pinto, who has
exposed illegal corporate appropriation of timber-rich
land, as well as corruption involving land titles.
Shi Tao is serving a 10-year sentence in China on
charges of ¡°leaking state secrets abroad.¡± Shi
worked as an editor for Dangdai Shang Bao (Contemporary
Trade News), a newspaper in the city of Changsha, in
Hunan Province. He also wrote essays calling for
political reform that were posted on overseas news Web
sites that are banned in China.
He was arrested in November 2004 for posting notes from
a directive issued by China¡¯s Propaganda Department
that instructed the media on how to cover the 15th
anniversary of the military crackdown in Tiananmen
Square. Shi¡¯s appeal was rejected in June. His mother
has filed for a review of the appeal, charging
¡°serious procedural defects.¡±
Shi¡¯s imprisonment highlights the Chinese
government¡¯s intense efforts to control the Internet,
the only alternative to China¡¯s officially sanctioned
print and broadcast media. The government monitors
Internet content, blocks Web sites, requires bloggers to
register their identities, and solicits the help of
companies doing business in China. In this case, the
U.S. Internet giant Yahoo helped authorities identify
Shi through his e-mail account.
Half of the 42 journalists imprisoned in China at
year¡¯s end in 2004 were jailed for work distributed on
the Internet. Many had written for Chinese-language Web
sites hosted overseas.
Burton Benjamin Memorial Award
CPJ will also honor the late Peter Jennings, anchor and
senior editor of ABC's "World News Tonight."
Jennings¡¯ career was intertwined with the major events
of the past four decades. He reported on the building of
the Berlin wall in the 1960s and its demolition in 1989.
He established the first American television news bureau
in the Arab world in 1968 and drew on his knowledge of
the region to inform his reporting in both Iraq wars. He
reported on the civil rights movement in the U.S. South
during the 1960s and the struggle for equality in South
Africa in the 1970s.
Jennings was one of the first reporters to go to Vietnam
in the 1960s, and he reported from Bosnia in the 1980s.
He was on the scene when the independent political
movement Solidarity was born in a Polish shipyard, and
he was in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany,
Romania, and the Soviet Union to record the fall of
communism.
In the week following the September 11, 2001, attacks,
Jennings anchored more than 60 hours of news coverage,
providing a reliable and reassuring voice during a time
of crisis. He also earned a reputation for raising
complex issues. His special series, "Peter Jennings
Reporting," focused on vital international affairs
such as the tense relations between India and Pakistan,
the crisis in Haiti, and the drug trade in Central and
South America. He also tackled important domestic issues
such as abortion, gun control, and health care.
Jennings was named anchor and senior editor of
"World News Tonight" in 1983. In more than 20
years in that position, he was honored with almost every
major award given to television journalists.
The Burton Benjamin Memorial Award is given for a
lifetime of distinguished achievement in the cause of
press freedom. It is named in honor of the late CBS News
senior producer and former CPJ chairman who died in
1988.
For details about the dinner: http://www.cpj.org/awards05/Save_date_05.pdf
The Committee to Protect Journalists is an independent,
nonprofit organization dedicated to the defense of press
freedom everywhere.
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