
New York,
February 12, 2010—The Committee to Protect
Journalists is concerned about reported border incidents involving journalists
attempting to enter Canada
from the United States
to cover protests and other events related to the Olympic Games, which begin
tonight.
John Weston Osburn, a Salt Lake City
freelance journalist associated with the news organization IndyMedia, was
interrogated and denied entry by Canadian border authorities near Vancouver on Tuesday due
to a past conviction for a misdemeanor, according to a report by Vancouver
Media Co-op. After being turned away by Canadian authorities a second time at
the same crossing, Osburn was interrogated by U.S. border authorities who detained
him for two hours and searched through his journals, computer and digital camera,
the journalist told Vancouver Media Co-op in an interview. The interview was rebroadcast on the
U.S.-based syndicated broadcast program, “Democracy Now!”
A second journalist, Martin Macias Jr., a contributor to Vocalo, an online news outlet and
affiliate of Chicago Public Radio, was detained for two hours and interrogated
by Canadian authorities on Saturday, before being turned away and put on a
plane to Seattle,
according to a report in the Huffington Post.
Macias was planning to attend a press conference by the Olympic Resistance
Network, a group critical of the games.
"I was in the
passport line in Vancouver," Macias is quoted
saying on Huffington Post, "and
I told them I was a radio journalist and a student at Malcolm X College. The agent put a big circle and
x on my ticket. I was pulled out the line and questioned aggressively for two
hours. They wanted to know what I was going to do in Vancouver, who I was meeting with, who
organized the conference, and what they looked like. They took all my contact
information and business cards of journalists and other people I was to connect
with while in Vancouver."
Canadian authorities
provided no explicit reason for denying entry to Macias, according to press
reports.
CPJ
has documented two other incidents of harassment related to the Olympics. In
December, news videographer Ian Robertson was shoved to the ground and struck in
the head by Canadian security officers in Toronto
while covering the Olympic torch relay. Robertson was hospitalized with a
concussion, according to the Canadian Press. Another journalist, photographer
Dave Thomas, was pushed several times by officers but was not injured, the
Canadian Press reported. Canadian officials told the Canadian Press that the
officers acted in an “appropriate manner.”
In
November, the host of "Democracy Now!" was detained by Canadian
authorities for 90 minutes when she tried to cross the border near Vancouver. Host Amy
Goodman, who had been invited to speak at Vancouver Public Library about her
new, unrelated book, was issued a limited visa stipulating that she had to
leave Canada
within 48 hours.
Jennie
Chen, a spokeswoman for the Canadian Embassy in Washington, said she could not discuss
specific incidents because of privacy restrictions. In general, she said, travelers
seeking to enter Canada
are assessed on a case-by-case basis based on considerations that include
security. Chen said authorities did not alter admission standards for the
Olympics.
Joanne
Ferreira, spokeswoman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection in the Department
of Homeland Security, said the agency would not discuss specific cases.
“Canadian
authorities should clarify why these journalists have been prevented from
entering the country to cover the Winter Olympics and related events,” said CPJ
Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. “Silence reinforces the impression that a
journalist who intends to cover protests around the Games risks being denied
entry.”