A new Uzbek media watchdog has urged international organisations promoting journalist's rights to pay more attention to the situation in this Central Asian republic where there is no independent press
Published:
19 January 2005 y., Wednesday
A new Uzbek media watchdog has urged international organisations promoting journalist's rights to pay more attention to the situation in this Central Asian republic where there is no independent press and freedom of speech is severely curtailed.
"Uzbekistan is becoming a dangerous place for journalists who dare to challenge the government," Yusuf Rasulov, head of the Association for the Protection of Journalist's Rights and Freedoms (APJRF), told IRIN in the capital, Tashkent.
Rasulov, a former Voice of America (VOA) correspondent, said the aim of the NGO was to protect the handful of independent journalists working in Uzbekistan who are often victims of harassment, attack and threats from security forces.
He was attacked and brutally beaten by a group of women, while police looked on, while covering a protest in Tashkent's huge Chorsu market in 2003. "Since then, as we have been trying to create this new NGO, I have been threatened and often watched by security people," he said.
Uzbekistan, Central Asia's most populous state, is known for imprisoning opponents of President Islam Karimov's regime or forcing them into exile and widely criticised for slow economic reforms and growing poverty, particularly in rural areas.
Western radio stations broadcasting to Uzbekistan and the region in the Uzbek language are virtually the only critical media in this Central Asian country due to strict state control of national and local broadcast and print media.
Šaltinis:
irinnews.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
As families across the United States struggle to keep their homes and their jobs, they are having to make all kinds of sacrifices - including giving up their pets.
more »
Unless you are lucky enough to be sitting in a park with a laptop, then if you are reading this you are probably in one of the 160 million buildings in the European Union.
more »
Germany's decided to ban the cultivation - and sale - of maize with genetically modified organisms, also known as GMOs.
more »
U.S president Barack Obama has lived up to his election night promise. A new First Dog will soon be gracing the lawns of the White House.
more »
Ninio - bull elephant to come to Poznan Zoo in Poland - is suspected of being gay and unlikely to be much help in creating any baby elephants at the zoo.
more »
The New York town of Hempstead bought five Nigerian dwarf baby goats for removing weeds at a park.
more »
Pensioner Bernhard Nermerich and his wife Michaela, love nothing more than preparing to celebrate Easter.
more »
The impact of poverty on women and the work-life balance are just two issues the Women's Rights Committee had tackled over the last Parliamentary term.
more »
No-one has bought it yet but this wedding dress is already proving to be a tourist attraction in Romania.
more »
More than 100 Irish women leaders (and some men), from all walks of life, came together to exchange views on the economic crisis at a special one-day conference entitled "Challenges to Irish women in the current economic climate" held in Dublin on 4 April.
more »