15 May 2009 | Index Index, minipost
Supermarkets including Tesco, Morrisons, Sainsburys and Asda, will display the latest Manic Street Preachers album in a plain slipcase after deeming the cover “inappropriate” and potentially offensive to shoppers. Read more here
15 May 2009 | Index Index, Middle East and North Africa, minipost
US-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi has left Iran, and flown to Austria with her family after being acquitted of espionage charges on Monday. A film on censorship in Iranian music, co-scripted by Saberi and directed by 2006 Index on Censorship award winner, Bahman Ghobadi premiered at Cannes Film festival yesterday. Read more here
14 May 2009 | Uncategorized
Matthew Taylor of the RSA has addressed Jonathan Dimbleby’s criticisms of the BBC Trust on indexoncensorship.org. He sees the culture of compliance as a real problem for journalists:
Jonathan has written a powerful attack on the BBC Trust for its censuring of BBC Middle East correspondent Jeremy Bowen. Now, I am all for media accountability, but having read through the detail of this case the Trust response does seem excessive. An essay by Bowen on the 1967 Sid Day War was criticised by two well-known pro-Israeli activists. The Trust then agreed to a number of small amendments to Bowen’s piece. Supporters of the journalist fear that the damage to his and the BBC’s reputation caused by this apparent censure from the Trust is massively disproportionate.
My many friends in the BBC tell me that the system of editorial compliance now feels out of control. Fear of any criticism of content is creating cumbersome form-filling processes, a burgeoning bureaucracy and posing a threat to freedom and creativity (there is even talk by some programme makers of establishing an anonymous website on which to publish what they see as the more ludicrous compliance decisions). I was reminded of these concerns this morning when I heard that the BBC is again investigating Jonathan Ross, this time as a consequence of four complaints (so far) that a joke he made last weekend was homophobic.
But, he adds, the BBC needs to do more to ensure the support of the public:
We form general impressions of organisations, as we do of people. Those we judge to be modest and generous we are inclined to forgive when they make errors. But when those we deem arrogant and self interested err we enjoy their discomfort (witness the MPs’ expenses saga). Could it be that instead of attempting to avoid all editorial criticism — a project that will either fail or be deeply counter productive –– the BBC should be focussing more on its image as a Corporation?
Read the full post here
14 May 2009 | Index Index, minipost
Dissident independent journalist Alberto Santiago Du Bouchet is facing a jail term after being involved in an argument with a police officer. Du Bouchet was transferred to the Melena 2 prison on 10 May after his arrest on 18 April.
Read more here