Georgia: 2005

Special Reports

  

Journalists in prison in 2005

China, Cuba, two African nations are top jailers of journalists.Ethiopian crackdown fuels worldwide increase; U.S. is 6th among nations.

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The Hands That Feed

Colombia may be unique in the extent to which its press censors itself in fear of physical reprisals. Powerful economic factors, though hardly exceptional, add yet more pressure.

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In Their Words

The Committee to Protect Journalists interviewed three dozen journalists around the country. Here is a sample of topics they said they’d investigate if not for fear of reprisals.

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Cubans: Direct Line to Readers

Since 1995, when the first independent news agencies emerged in Cuba, dozens of journalists have fled the country to escape harassment, threats, detention, or jail. Many have settled in the United States or Spain, where some continue to work as journalists. Manuel Vázquez Portal, who won CPJ’s 2003 International Press Freedom Award, settled in Miami…

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Marked for Death

The Five Most Murderous Countries for Journalists

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El encarcelamiento de periodistas

Comité para la Protección de los Periodistas REPORTAJES ESPECIAL DE TODAS PARTES DEL MUNDO Cuatro países sobresalen en el encarcelamiento de periodistas

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Journalists in prison in 2004: Four nations stand out

New York, February 3, 2005–Four countries with long records of press repression–China, Cuba, Eritrea, and Burma–account for more than three-quarters of the journalists imprisoned around the world, a new analysis by the Committee to Protect Journalists has found.

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2005