12 December 2006
The 15th Reporters Without Borders - Fondation de France prize was
presented in Paris on Tuesday, 12 December 2006
he 15th Reporters Without Borders - Fondation de France prize was
awarded to a journalist, a media, a press freedom defender and a
cyber-dissident. The 2006 laureates are:
- U WIN TIN (Burma) in the "Journalist" category
- NOVAYA GAZETA (Russia) in the "Media" category
- JOURNALISTE EN DANGER (Democratic Republic of Congo) in the "Defender
of press freedom" category
- GUILLERMO FARINAS HERNANDEZ (Cuba) in the "Cyberdissident" category
The 15th Reporters Without Borders - Fondation de France 2006 prize is
awarded to:
THE JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR who, through their work, attitude or
principled stands demonstrated a strong commitment to press freedom.
The laureate is 76-year-old Burmese journalist U Win Tin, who was
sentenced to 20 years in prison for "subversion" and "anti-government
propaganda" in 1989. After more than 17 years in prison and despite
faltering health, the country's most renowned journalist will not give
way. In his special cell at Insein jail, near Rangoon, Saya, "The Sage",
as his comrades call him, refuses to renounce his commitment to the
National League for Democracy, robbed by the military junta of a
landslide electoral victory in 1990. He continues to call for the
unconditional release of thousands of prisoners of opinion held in the
country's prisons., U Win Tin was one of the political mentors of Nobel
Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, also deprived of her freedom. U
Win Tin, who has been weakened by a urinary infection and two heart
attacks, is only allowed two visits per month.
The other 2006 nominees in this category were Dawit Isaac (Eritrea) and
Hollman Felipe Morris (Colombia).
Learn more on Win Tin and the nominees
A MEDIA which exemplifies the struggle for the right to inform the
public and to be informed.
The prize goes to Russian bi-weekly Novaya Gazeta, the newspaper for
which Anna Politkovskaya was working when she was murdered in Moscow on
7 October 2006. Novaya Gazeta carries out investigations regularly
exposing corruption in the Russian administration. Also highly critical
of government policy, the newspaper carried numerous reports by Anna
Politkovskaya on Chechnya, but also on developments in Russian society.
The founders of the "New Newspaper" set themselves the objective of
being independent and of extending its circulation throughout Russia.
The other 2006 nominees in this category were the Democratic Voice of
Burma (Burma), Uthayan (Sri Lanka) and An-Nahar (Lebanon).
Learn more on Novaia Gazeta and the nominees
A DEFENDER of press freedom
The prize is awarded to the organisation "Journalist in danger" (JED),
based in Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Founded in 1997
by journalists Donat M'Baya Tshimanga and Tshivis Tshivuadi, JED is one
of Africa's most active and respected press freedom organisations., JED
is particularly combative when it comes to reminding easily corrupted
journalists of their duty. It is also in the vanguard of the struggle to
get the government to reform unfair and illiberal legislation under
which journalists are regularly sent to the capital's Penitentiary and
Re-education centre in the capital.
The other 2006 nominees in this category were the Centre for Journalism
and Public Ethics (CEPET, Mexico), Tadjigoul Begmedova (Turkmenistan)
and Anwar al-Bunni (Syria).
Learn more on JED and the nominees
A CYBER-DISSIDENT prevented from informing the public online
The prize is awarded to Guillermo Fariñas Hernández (Cuba), head of the
independent news agency Cubanacán Press. In February 2006, he began a
hunger and thirst strike to demand access to a "free Internet" for all
Cubans. The authorities forcibly hospitalised him and put him on a drip
to bring his protest to an end, a step which led to even greater
international media interest., Guillermo Fariñas has said he is ready to
die so that his compatriots can finally have the right to be informed.
He has been in intensive care since 20 August because of kidney and
heart problems. The authorities did offer to allow him "limited" access
to the Internet, but he refused, explaining that he could not honourably
exercise his profession as a journalist by only looking at news that had
been filtered by the government. He is continuing his work at Cubanacán
and has become one of the leading voices among Cuban opposition journalists.
The other 2006 nominees in this category were Habib Saleh (Syria) and
Yang Zili (China).
Learn more on Guillermo Fariñas Hernández (Cuba) and the nominees
Reporters Without Borders pays tribute to Gebran Tuweni
Gebran Tuweni, publisher of the daily An-Nahar, was murdered in a car
bombing in Beirut on 12 December 2005. He was the third journalist -
after Samir Kassir and May Shidiac - to be targeted during 2005. The
investigation into his death has now stalled, because of political
obstacles and violence which continues to rock the country.
Dancer Yalda Younes will perform at the ceremony in tribute to this
major Lebanese press figure in the play NO, written by Zad Moultaka in
honour of the Lebanese journalist Samir Kassir, created in Beirut on 2
June 2006, to mark the first anniversary of his murder.
The Reporters Without Borders - Fondation de France prize has been
awarded since 1992
In honouring a journalist, a media, a press freedom defender and a
cyber-dissident, Reporters Without Borders and the Fondation de France
draws the attention of public opinion to the wide range of attacks on
the right to inform the public and to be informed and for the need to
actively support press freedom.
Each prize is worth €2, 500.
Since it was set up, the Reporters Withotu Borders - Fondation de France
prize has been awarded to Zlatko Dizdarevic (Bosnia-Herzegovina - 1992),
Wang Juntao (China - 1993), André Sibomana (Rwanda - 1994), Christina
Anyanwu (Nigeria - 1995), Isik Yurtçu (Turkey - 1996), Raúl Rivero (Cuba
- 1997), Nizar Nayyuf (Syria - 1998), San San Nweh (Burma - 1999),
Carmen Gurruchaga (Spain - 2000), Reza Alijani (Iran - 2001), Grigory
Pasko (Russia - 2002), Ali Lmrabet (Morocco - 2003), Hafnawi Ghoul
(Algeria- 2004), Zhao Yan (China - 2005).
Several winners have been released just a few weeks or months after
receiving their prize. Among them was the Moroccan journalist Ali
Lmrabet, awarded the prize on 10 December 2003 and freed on 7 January
2004, Russian journalist Grigory Pasko, laureate in December 2002 and
released in January 2003, Burmese journalist San San Nweh, a
prize-winner in December 1999 and released in 2001.
The Reporters Without Borders - Fondation de France prize is awarded by
an international jury made up of the 35 following members:
Ekram Shinwari (Afghanistan), Rubina Möhring (Austria), Nayeem Islam
Khan (Bangladesh), Zhanna Litvina (Belarus), Olivier Basille (Belgium),
Colette Braeckman (Belgium), Sebastião Salgado (Brazil ), Maung Maung
Myint (Burma), François Bugingo (Canada), Carlos Cortes Castillo
(Colombia), Miriam Leiva (Cuba), Donat M'Baya Tshimanga (Democratic
Republic of Congo), Domenico Amha-Tsion (Eritrea), Francis Charhon
(France), Laurent Joffrin (France), Elise Lucet (France), Pierre
Veilletet (France), Sabine Christiansen (Germany), Michael Rediske
(Germany), Mimmo Candito (Italy), Sailab Mahsud (Pakistan), Ricardo
Uceda (Peru), Michel Kik (Qatar), Mircea Toma (Romania), Alexey Simonov
(Russia), Omar Faruk Osman (Somalia) Fernando Castelló (Spain), Maria
Dolores Masana Argüelles (Spain), Vicente Verdu (Spain), Eva Elmsater
(Sweden), George Gordon-Lennox (Switzerland), Gérald Sapey
(Switzerland), Sihem Bensedrine (Tunisia) Ethan Zuckerman (United
States), Ben Ami Fihman (Venezuela).
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=20098
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