Dia a Dia Sara Masó I Carme Tejeiro
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Monde.20011122.Pdf
EN ÎLE-DE-FRANCE a Dans « aden » : tout le cinéma et une sélection de sorties Demandez notre supplément www.lemonde.fr 57e ANNÉE – Nº 17674 – 7,90 F - 1,20 EURO FRANCE MÉTROPOLITAINE -- JEUDI 22 NOVEMBRE 2001 FONDATEUR : HUBERT BEUVE-MÉRY – DIRECTEUR : JEAN-MARIE COLOMBANI Afghanistan : les débats de l’après-guerre b Quels étaient les buts de la guerre, quel rôle pour les humanitaires ? b « Le Monde » donne la parole à des intellectuels et à des ONG b Conférence à Berlin sur l’avenir de l’Afghanistan, sous l’égide de l’ONU b Le reportage de notre envoyée spéciale en territoire taliban SOMMAIRE formation d’un gouvernement pluriethnique. Les islamistes étran- BRUNO BOUDJELAL/VU b Guerre éclair, doute persistant : gers de Kunduz encerclée risquent Dans un cahier spécial de huit d’être massacrés. Kaboul retrouve a REPORTAGE pages, Le Monde donne la parole à le goût des petites libertés, mais un spécialiste du droit d’ingéren- une manifestation de femmes a ce, Mario Bettati, et à deux person- été interdite. Notre envoyée spé- Une petite ville nalités de l’humanitaire, Rony ciale en territoire taliban, Françoi- Brauman et Sylvie Brunel. Ils disent se Chipaux, a rencontré des popula- leur gêne ou leur inquiétude tions déplacées qui redoutent l’Al- POINTS DE VUE en Algérie devant le rôle que les Etats-Unis liance du Nord. p. 2 et 3 font jouer aux ONG. Des intellec- L’ÉCRIVAIN François Maspero tuels français, Robert Redeker, b La coalition et l’humanitaire : Le Cahier a passé le mois d’août dans une Jean Clair, Daniel Bensaïd et Willy Pentagone compte sur l’Alliance petite ville de la côte algéroise. -
Afghanistan Page 1 of 23
Afghanistan Page 1 of 23 Afghanistan Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2001 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 4, 2002 Afghanistan has experienced civil war and political instability for 22 years. There was no functioning central government, until December 22, 2001 when the Afghan Interim Administration (AIA) took office. During most of the year, the Taliban, a Pashtun-dominated ultra-conservative Islamic movement, controlled approximately 90 percent of the country, including the capital of Kabul, and all major urban areas, except Faizabad. In 1997 the Taliban issued an edict renaming the country the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, and named its leader, Mullah Omar, Head of State and Commander of the Faithful, granting him ultimate authority. Omar headed the inner Shura (Council), located in the southern city of Kandahar. The Taliban's power structure reportedly narrowed during the year, and its principal consultative bodies, the Shuras, reportedly no longer functioned. Until October 7, a rival regime, the Islamic State of Afghanistan (generally known as the Northern Alliance or United Front), which nominally was headed by former Afghanistan President Burhanuddin Rabbani, an ethnic Tajik, controlled about 10 percent of the country. Rabbani and his chief military commander, Ahmed Shah Masood, for most of the year, controlled the majority Tajik areas in the country's extreme northeast. The Rabbani regime controlled most of the country's embassies and retained Afghanistan's U.N. seat after the U.N. General Assembly again deferred a decision on Afghanistan's credentials. A number of provincial administrations maintained limited functions, but civil institutions were rudimentary. -
Pera,Undiscorsocontrocasini
ARRETRATI L IRE 3.000 – EURO 1.55 SPEDIZ. IN ABBON. POST. 45\% anno 78 n.235 martedì 20 novembre 2001 lire 1.500 (euro 0.77) www.unita.it ART. 2 COMMA 20/B LEGGE 662/96 – FILIALE DI ROMA «Il silenzio è pesante e sinistro. Osama. Ma certo qualcuno Al Qaeda». Dall’ultimo articolo Non siamo neanche sicuri che è passato di qui dopo di Maria Grazia Cutuli, l’area sia libera dagli arabi di la partenza dei membri di Corriere della Sera, 19 novembre Il primo caduto italiano è una giornalista Maria Grazia Cutuli, del Corriere della Sera, uccisa in Afghanistan insieme a quattro colleghi Aveva scoperto fiale di gas nervino in una base di Al Qaeda appena abbandonata dai taleban DALL’INVIATO Gabriel Bertinetto America ITA REVE QUETTA Hanno bloccato la macchi- V B na, li hanno fatti scendere, poi li han- L’ECONOMIA no finiti a colpi di kalashnikov: quat- DI UNA REPORTER tro reporter, un interprete. Tra di lo- ro Maria Grazia Cutuli, 39 anni, in- NELLA PALUDE ORAGGIOSA viata del «Corriere della Sera». Erano C in viaggio da Jalalabad a Kabul, lun- DELLA POLITICA aria Grazia Cutuli, inviato del go una strada terra di nessuno. Insie- «Corriere della Sera» è il primo me alla nostra collega sono rimasti Robert Reich M caduto italiano nella guerra del- uccisi anche l’inviato di «El Mundo», l’Afghanistan. Ma lei non era in guerra. Julio Fuentes, un cameraman della Non aveva armi. Non faceva parte di un Reuters, un fotogrago afghano e un uasi tutti concordano sul fatto contingente e nessuno le copriva le spalle. -
Womenonthefrontlines
Winners of the Overseas Press Club Awards 2018 Annual Edition DATELINE #womenonthefrontlines DATELINE 2018 1 A person throws colored powder during a Holi festival party organized by Jai Jai Hooray and hosted by the Brooklyn Children’s Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., March 3, 2018. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly A person throws colored powder during a Holi festival party organized by Jai Jai Hooray and hosted by the Brooklyn Children’s Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., March 3, 2018. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly A person throws colored powder during a Holi festival party organized by Jai Jai Hooray and hosted by the Brooklyn Children’s Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., March 3, 2018. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly Reuters congratulates Reutersthe winners congratulates of the 2017 Overseas Press Club Awards. the winners of the 2017 Overseas Press Club Awards. OverseasWe are proud to Press support theClub Overseas Awards. Press Club and its commitment to excellence in international journalism. We are proud to support the Overseas Press Club and its commitmentWe are proud toto excellencesupport the in Overseas international Press journalism. Club and its commitment to excellence in international journalism. 2 DATELINE 2018 President’s Letter / DEIDRE DEPKE n the reuters memorial speech delivered at Oxford last February – which I urge Iyou all to read if you haven’t – Washington Post Editor Marty Baron wondered how we arrived at the point where the public shrugs off demonstrably false statements by public figures, where instant in touch with people’s lives. That address her injuries continues websites suffer no consequences is why ensuring the accuracy of to report from the frontlines in for spreading lies and conspiracy sources and protecting communi- Afghanistan. -
N° 2935 Assemblée Nationale
° N 2935 ______ ASSEMBLÉE NATIONALE CONSTITUTION DU 4 OCTOBRE 1958 DOUZIÈME LÉGISLATURE Enregistré à la Présidence de l'Assemblée nationale le 8 mars 2006. RAPPORT D'INFORMATION DÉPOSÉ en application de l'article 145 du Règlement PAR LA COMMISSION DES AFFAIRES ÉTRANGÈRES sur le statut des journalistes et correspondants de guerre en cas de conflit (1) et présenté par M. Pierre LELLOUCHE M. François LONCLE Députés —— __________________________________________________________________ (1) La composition de cette mission figure au verso de la présente page La mission d’information sur le statut des journalistes et correspondants de guerre en cas de conflit est composée de : MM. Pierre Lellouche et François Loncle. — 3 — SOMMAIRE ___ Pages INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................... 5 I – L’EVOLUTION DES CONFLITS REND INADAPTEES LES CONVENTIONS INTERNATIONALES PROTEGEANT LES JOURNALISTES ........................................ 7 A – UNE EVOLUTION DES CONFLITS MARQUEE PAR L’ACCROISSEMENT DES MENACES A L’ENCONTRE DES JOURNALISTES...................................................... 7 B – L’AFFIRMATION DE LA LIBERTE D’INFORMER EN DROIT INTERNATIONAL ........... 11 C – UNE PROTECTION DES JOURNALISTES INSUFFISANTE ....................................... 13 1. Le droit international en vigueur..................................................................... 13 2. Les limites de la protection reconnue aux journalistes............................... 16 3. Les obstacles -
LE MONDE/PAGES<UNE>
LES MUTATIONS LES INITIATIVES www.lemonde.fr 57e ANNÉE – Nº 17666 – 7,90 F - 1,20 EURO FRANCE MÉTROPOLITAINE -- MARDI 13 NOVEMBRE 2001 FONDATEUR : HUBERT BEUVE-MÉRY – DIRECTEUR : JEAN-MARIE COLOMBANI Catastrophe en Algérie Le recul des talibans ouvre la route de Kaboul b b a Les inondations Les talibans refluent dans tout le nord de l’Afghanistan et dans l’Ouest Les troupes dans le nord du pays de l’Alliance du Nord progressent rapidement et se disent prêtes à attaquer la capitale afghane ont fait 343 morts, b Trois journalistes, dont deux Français, ont été tués dans une embuscade au nord-est du pays dont 316 à Alger SOMMAIRE gnaient des forces de l’Alliance du Nord tombées dans une embusca- a b La guerre contre Al-Qaida : Les de. Il s’agit de Johanne Sutton, Les quartiers talibans ont subi de lourds revers 35 ans, de Radio France internatio- dans tout le nord de l’Afghanis- nale, Pierre Billaud, 31 ans, de RTL, populaires ont été tan. Ils paraissent en déroute, mais et d’un journaliste de Stern dont leurs reculs pourraient être un l’identité n’était pas connue lundi les plus touchés repli stratégique. L’Alliance du matin. p. 3 et la chronique de Pierre Georges p. 36 Nord progresse rapidement. Les a opposants au pouvoir taliban sont b Sur le front diplomatique : A La presse aux portes de Kaboul et se disent l’ONU, George W. Bush appelle DOCUMENT dénonce prêts à attaquer la capitale. Mais toutes les nations à renforcer la les Etats-Unis ne souhaitent pas coalition contre le terrorisme. -
Stampa Nel Mirino
The Bronx Journal/December 2001 B 2 I TA L I A N STAMPA NEL MIRINO MARA PALERMO Bronx Journal Staff Reporter rima vittima italiana in Afghanistan, e non è un soldato. Si tratta di Maria probabilmente dovute secondo gli esperti, con cui aveva pure Grazia Cutuli, 39 anni, giornalista alla caduta del corpo per terra. Questo è collaborato. Da qui del Corriere della Sera, inviata italiana che quanto emerge dall'esame del cadavere ese- il trasferimento a ha perso la vita il 19 novembre. guito dai medici legali dell'Università La Milano per la Maria Grazia Cutuli si trovava in un con- Sapienza incaricati di stabilire le cause scuola di giornalis- voglio con altri giornalisti su una strada che della morte della giornalista. mo. Nel capoluogo collega Jalalabad a Kabul. Secondo “Potrebbe essere stata un’esecuzione sim- lombardo aveva Edoardo San Juan, giornalista della televi- bolica contro l'Occidente o una rapina…” continuato la sione catalana Tv3, la Cutuli avrebbe deciso dice Mario Cutuli, fratello Maria Grazia. gavetta nel gior- all'ultimo momento di lasciare Jalalabad L’uomo rivela infatti dei particolari inqui- nale Centocose. alla volta della capitale afghana. San Juan, etanti che potrebbero avvalorare le sue Da lì il salto di si trovava nello stesso convoglio ma su ipotesi. Per esempio, al giornalista spagno- qualità ad Epoca un’altra vettura. L’inviata italiana era nella lo Julio Fuentes sembra sia stata amputata ed infine al macchina che guidava la colonna mentre una mano, mentre a Maria Grazia, una parte Corriere della Edoardo San Juan si trovava in fondo al del lobo dell'orecchio destro. -
Freedom of Expression & Impunity Campaign
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION & IMPUNITY CAMPAIGN CHALLENGING IMPUNITY: A PEN REPORT ON UNPUNISHED CRIMES AGAINST WRITERS AND JOURNALISTS PEN Club de México PROLOGUE The year-long Campaign on Freedom of Expression and Impunity, focusing on unsolved and unpunished crimes aimed at silencing writers and journalists, was launched on November 25, 2002, in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, during a conference of the Writers in Prison Committee (WiPC) of International PEN. Direct actions have been taken throughout the year and culminated with the release of this PEN report on the problem of impunity and a roundtable during International PEN’s 69th World Congress of Writers in Mexico in November 2003. Please visit http://www.pencanada.ca/impunity/index.html. The campaign was led by PEN Canada and found partners in the Writers in Prison Committee of International PEN, PEN American Center and PEN Mexico. Thanks to all who took part. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Country profiles: Colombia 5 Iran 6 Mexico 7 Philippines 8 Russia 9 Writers & journalists killed since 1992 10 PEN recommendations and advocacy 14 Resources on impunity 18 Impunity Watch 20 1 “Through my experience as co-plaintiff in the on-going trial to resolve the murder of my sister, Myrna Mack, I have seen impunity up close, along every step of this tortuous path in search of justice. I have felt it when essential information has been denied that would determine individual criminal responsibility; when judges and witnesses have been threatened; when the lawyers for the accused military officials use the same constitutional guarantees of due process in order to obstruct judicial procedures; and when my family, my lawyers, my colleagues and I have been threatened or been victims of campaigns to discredit us. -
LE MONDE/PAGES<UNE>
www.lemonde.fr 57e ANNÉE – Nº 17673 – 7,90 F - 1,20 EURO FRANCE MÉTROPOLITAINE -- MERCREDI 21 NOVEMBRE 2001 FONDATEUR : HUBERT BEUVE-MÉRY – DIRECTEUR : JEAN-MARIE COLOMBANI M. Jospin en difficulté Le nouveau désordre afghan b a La popularité Seigneurs de la guerre et factions rivales plongent certaines régions de l’Afghanistan dans du premier ministre l’insécurité et le chaos b Notre reportage dans la région de Jalalabad où quatre autres journalistes en forte baisse ont été tués b Britanniques et Français se heurtent à l’Alliance du Nord pour déployer leurs soldats dans les sondages SOMMAIRE b Le conflit et ses répercussions : L’ Europe lie son soutien financier b La guerre contre Al-Qaida : Qua- à la mise en place d’un régime a tre journalistes ont été tués, selon « légitime et multiethnique ». Les Les intentions leur chauffeur, lundi 19 novembre, Quinze veulent combler les lacunes sur la route reliant Jalalabad à de la défense européenne. Six pays de vote restent Kaboul. Le désordre règne dans européens travaillent en commun cette région livrée aux querelles sur un nouveau système d’armes. favorables entre seigneurs de la guerre. Des Nouvelle révolte de musulmans AFP à Jacques Chirac poches de résistance parsèment le dans le sud des Philippines. Selon ENQUÊTE pays. Le reportage de notre les prévisions de l’OCDE, le chôma- envoyé spécial à Jalalabad, Patrice ge continuera d’augmenter en Claude. Les talibans tiennent enco- 2002, la demande intérieure chute- L’arme a Insécurité, chômage, re Kunduz, dans le nord-est de ra et la croissance faiblira. p. -
USAF Counterproliferation Center CPC Outreach Journal #128
#128 28 Nov 2001 USAF COUNTERPROLIFERATION CENTER CPC OUTREACH JOURNAL Air University Air War College Maxwell AFB, Alabama Welcome to the CPC Outreach Journal. As part of USAF Counterproliferation Center’s mission to counter weapons of mass destruction through education and research, we’re providing our government and civilian community a source for timely counterproliferation information. This information includes articles, papers and other documents addressing issues pertinent to US military response options for dealing with nuclear, biological and chemical threats and attacks. It’s our hope this information resource will help enhance your counterproliferation issue awareness. Established here at the Air War College in 1998, the USAF/CPC provides education and research to present and future leaders of the Air Force, as well as to members of other branches of the armed services and Department of Defense. Our purpose is to help those agencies better prepare to counter the threat from weapons of mass destruction. Please feel free to visit our web site at www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/awc-cps.htm for in-depth information and specific points of contact. Please direct any questions or comments on CPC Outreach Journal to Lt Col Michael W. Ritz, ANG Special Assistant to Director of CPC or Jo Ann Eddy, CPC Outreach Editor, at (334) 953-7538 or DSN 493-7538. To subscribe, change e-mail address, or unsubscribe to this journal or to request inclusion on the mailing list for CPC publications, please contact Mrs. Eddy. The following articles, papers or documents do not necessarily reflect official endorsement of the United States Air Force, Department of Defense, or other US government agencies. -
Journalism, Civil Liberties and the War on Terrorism
International Federation of Journalists Journalism, Civil Liberties And The War on Terrorism Final Report on The Aftermath of September 11 And the Implications for Journalism and Civil Liberties By Aidan White, General Secretary Introduction In the days immediately following the September 11th 2001 attacks on the United States, the IFJ carried out a brief survey of its member organisations seeking information about the immediate impact of the terrorist attacks. The report, to which journalists’ groups in 20 countries responded, was published on October 23rd 2001 and revealed fears of a fast- developing crisis for journalism and civil liberties. Some eight months later, these fears have been confirmed. The declaration of a “war on terrorism” by the United States and its international coalition has created a dangerous situation in which journalists have become victims as well as key actors in reporting events. This is war of a very different kind. There is no set piece military confrontation. There is no clearly defined enemy, no hard-and-fast objective, and no obvious point of conclusion. Inevitably, it has created a pervasive atmosphere of paranoia in which the spirit of press freedom and pluralism is fragile and vulnerable. It has also led to casualties among journalists and media staff. The brutal killing of Daniel Pearl in Pakistan at the start of the year, chillingly filmed by his media-wise murderers, has come to symbolise the appalling consequences of September 11 for journalism and for freedom of expression. That murder, together with the earlier killing of Marc Brunereau, Johanne Sutton, Pierre Billaud, Volker Handloik, Azizullah Haidari, Harry Burton, Julio Fuentes, Maria Grazia Cutuli and 1 Ulf Strömberg in Afghanistan, is a grim indicator of the dangers facing journalists. -
H-Diplo Journal Watch, Third Quarter 2008
[jw] h-diplo JOURNAL WATCH, I to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/ Third Quarter 2008 7 August 2008 Compiled by Scott Rausch, University of Washington Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 23, No. 3 (June 2008) http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=0268- 4527&volume=23&issue=3 . Best, Richard A., “What the Intelligence Community Got Right About Iraq,” 289-302 . Lowenthal, Mark M. “Towards a Reasonable Standard for Analysis: How Right, How Often on Which Issues?” 303-315 . Odom, William E., “Intelligence Analysis,” 316-332 . Johnson, Loch K., “Glimpses into the Gems of American Intelligence: The President's Daily Brief and the National Intelligence Estimate,” 333-370 . McCreary, John and Richard A. Posner, “The Latest Intelligence Crisis,” 371-380 . Hewitt, Steve, “ ‘Strangely Easy to Obtain’: Canadian Passport Security, 1933–73,” 381- 405 International Affairs, Vol. 84, No. 3 (May 2008) http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/inta/84/3 Copyright © 2008 H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online. H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date of publication, H-Diplo, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Diplo editorial staff at [email protected]. H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Third Quarter 2008 . “Introduction,” PAOLA SUBACCHI, 413-420 . “Globalization, empire and natural law,” HAROLD JAMES, 421-436 . “The case of the World Trade Organization,” JOHN H. JACKSON, 437-454 . “The international monetary system: diffusion and ambiguity,” BENJAMIN J.