| The CPJ International Press
Freedom Awards honor journalists who have courageously provided independent
news coverage and viewpoints in the face of arrest, imprisonment, violence
against them and their families, and threats of death. The following five
journalists will receive the 1998 CPJ International Press Freedom Awards
from the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in ceremonies in New York
on November 24. CPJ will also honor Brian P. Lamb, C-SPAN's founder and
chief executive, with the Burton Benjamin Memorial
Award for distinguished achievement in the cause of press freedom.
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| Grémah
Boucar Grémah Boucar of Niger 's Anfani newspaper and magazine, and Radio Anfani, one of the country's only private radio stations, exemplifies the experiences of Africa's few truly independent radio broadcasters in his refusal to allow government intimidation and harassment to drive the station permanently off the air. In a region where radio is the most effective medium for reaching the majority of citizens, Boucar has refused to flee into exile and has withstood attacks, harassment, and arrest. He remains committed to providing Niger's citizens with critical coverage of the government and its policies. Read Grémah Boucar's Acceptance Remarks |
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Gustavo Gorriti |
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Goenawan Mohamad, founder and editor of Tempo news magazine in Indonesia, is a lifelong crusader for press freedom who has sought to hold government accountable to the public. A beacon of hope to Indonesian journalists, he has been unwavering in his determination to develop a genuinely independent press. Tempo, the independent weekly he founded in 1971, was the country's largest, most respected news magazine. It was silenced in 1994 at the beginning of Suharto's clampdown on Indonesian media. Now, with Suharto gone and a new government pledging a commitment to press freedom, Mohamad and a group of former staffers relaunched Tempo on October 6, with a dramatic lead article investigating the reported rapes of Chinese women during the rioting that preceded Suharto's resignation in May. |
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Pavel Sheremet |
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| Ruth Simon Ruth Simon of Eritrea, a correspondent for Agence France-Press, has been under arrest and held in detention, without trial, since April 25, 1997, for doing her job as an independent journalist in reporting statements made by Eritrea's president that Eritrean troops were fighting alongside rebel forces in neighboring Sudan. |
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Brian P.
Lamb
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