Two Tibetan web users have been sentenced to three-year jail terms after posting pictures of the exiled Dalai Lama on the Internet. Gyaltsen and Nyima Wangdu were given three-year sentences after being convicted of "communicating information to...
Launch of National Campaign for Libel Reform
“England’s libel laws are unjust, against the public interest and internationally criticised — there is urgent need for reform” this is the message performers, writers, poets, patient groups, legal experts, broadcasters, journalists and others represented by the Coalition for Libel Reform are sending to politicians.
The global libel war
Across the world, defamation laws are used to stifle debate and persecute individuals, writes Agnès Callamard
Nepal: female journalist assaulted
A journalist and councillor for the Federation of Nepali Journalists (FNJ), Tika Bista, was yesterday found in an unconscious state near her home. According to Bista's colleague Dhanbir Dahal, she had called him saying three men were following her...
China: prominent dissident faces subversion charges
Police in China have recommended that prominent dissident Liu Xiaobo be formally charged with subversion. He has been held in jail for over a year without charges and previously served 20 months for his part in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests....
Russian internet provider admits blocking websites
Claims of internet censorship have spread amongst the Russian blogosphere after the wireless internet service provider, Yota, admitted blocking access to certain websites. Denis Sverdlov, chief executive of WiMax operator Skartel, which runs the...
Ugandan anti-homosexuality bill
Jenni Hulse: Uganda’s anti-homosexuality bill is a serious threat to freedom of expression
Australia accussed of censoring North Korean artists
The Australian government has been accused of censorship after it refused visas to five North Korean artists invited to attend a rare exhibition of their work in Queensland. Australia's Foreign Minister Stephen Smith has denied the men visas,...
Iran: crackdown on protests and coverage
Iranian authorities have threatened tougher action on protesters after tens of thousands marched at universities across the country in the biggest anti-government rallies since the disputed June elections. Dozens of people are reported to have been...
Latin America: media reforms spark debate
Opinion on media law reforms has become increasingly polarised says Ángel García Català
Look but don’t play.
Orfeo Mattar: Australia’s rigid classification code is punishing videogamers and developers
Libel in the spotlight
Tom Bower on his struggle with defamation laws
