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
Four-year programme to protect kids from illegal or harmful internet content
more »
Thursday's bomb attacks in Madrid railway stations killed 192 people and wounded 1400, the Spanish interior ministry said
more »
The Pope wrote the poems at his summer residence outside Rome
more »
A complaint by Russian businessman with regard to the decision of the Lithuanian government on his expulsion from the republic is to be examined in the Vilnius court
more »
European Parliament elections: public services key issue for Finnish voters
more »
Thousands of entrepreneurs all over Belarus went on strike in a bid to protest laws stifling small business, the strike`s leaders said overnight
more »
Wincor Nixdorf account service terminals with 32-bit controllers
more »
In the two suicide attacks in Iraq on Sunday, the target was mainly the Khurdish settlements in northern Iraq
more »
Director General Greg Dyke has quit as the BBC's crisis deepens in the wake of Lord Hutton's damning verdict
more »
Kept away from the VIPs and amid a heavy police presence, protesters have taken to the streets of Switzerland to demonstrate against the World Economic Forum
more »