P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M

P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M
MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Brazil ( At least 25 Journalists attacked, detained amid Brazil protests )

 

At least 25 journalists have said they were attacked or briefly detained while covering protests that have spread throughout Brazil. (AFP/Tasso Marcelo)
At least 25 journalists have said they were attacked or briefly detained while covering protests that have spread throughout Brazil. (AFP/Tasso Marcelo)
New York, June 21, 2013--At least 25 journalists have reported being attacked or detained amid protests that have swept Brazil over the past two weeks, growing from discontent in São Paulo over public transportation fare hikes to wider nationwide demonstrations against government policies.
"Journalists covering the massive protests in Brazil are performing a key democratic function by informing Brazilian citizens about events of acute public interest," said Carlos Lauría, CPJ's senior program coordinator for the Americas. "Both police and protesters must respect their work and allow them to continue without interference. Authorities should guarantee the safety of all journalists covering the protests and should thoroughly investigate any attacks."
At least 15 journalists reported being attacked on June 13 as military police cracked down on protesters in São Paulo, according to the local association of investigative reporters ABRAJI. Two reported being hit in the eye with rubber bullets fired by police. News accounts said that both Giuliana Vallone, a reporter for Folha de S. Paulo, and Sérgio Andrade da Silva, a photographer for Futura Press agency, were hospitalized for their eye injuries.
Pedro Vedova, a reporter for GloboNews, said he had been hit in the head by a rubber bullet fired by police while covering protests in the city of Rio de Janeiro on June 20, according to news reports. He sought treatment at a local hospital for a forehead wound, the reports said. A security officer on June 19 punched and kicked Vladimir Platonow, a reporter for Agência Brasil, at a bus terminal in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro state, where he was documenting protesters fleeing from police, according to news reports. Platonow was not hospitalized for any injuries. A spokesman for the bus terminal said the assailant was not affiliated with the company.
Military police also detained at least five journalists covering the protests. ABRAJI reportedthat Piero Locatelli, a reporter for Carta Capital magazine, and Fernando Borges, a photographer for Terra, were briefly detained on June 13, and Leandro Machado, a reporter for the national daily Folha de S.Paulo, and Leandro Morais, a photographer for the news website Universo Online, were briefly detained on June 11. News accounts reported that Pedro Ribeiro Nogueira, a reporter for the website Portal Aprendiz who had been detained on June 11, was released after being held two days.
Journalists, particularly those working for major TV networks including Globo, have also been targeted by protesters who have criticized their coverage of events. News accounts reportedthat on June 17, Caco Barcellos, a reporter for Globo, was surrounded by protesters in São Paulo who prevented him from covering the demonstration. On June 13, protesters threw rocks at Vandrey Pereira, also a reporter for Globo, forcing the journalist to leave the protest, news reports said.
Newsreports said that on June 20, protesters set fire to the vehicles of the TV networks SBT in Rio de Janeiro city and TV Bandeirantes in the city of Natal, and that on June 18, protesters threw vinegar in the face of Rita Lisauskas, reporter for TV Bandeirantes. The accounts did not report serious injuries. News reports also said that protesters set fire to a van belonging to the TV network Record on June 18 in São Paulo.
A spike in lethal violence over the past two years has made Brazil one of the most dangerous countries for journalists in the world, according to CPJ research. In 2013, Brazil was the 10th worst country in CPJ's Impunity Index, which spotlights countries where journalists are murdered regularly and the killers go free. The country was also named to CPJ's Risk List, which identified 10 places where press freedom suffered in 2012.

  • For more data on Brazil, visit CPJ's Brazil page here.

Iran ( Sixteen arrested for celebrating in streets - Iran’s victory against South Korea ) World Cup Soccer

Posted on: 22nd June,

Boshehr Province People took to the streets to celebrate Iran's victory in soccer match.
HRANA News Agency – The Police Chief in Boshehr Province has announced that 16 individuals have been arrested after people took to the streets last Tuesday to celebrate Iran’s victory against South Korea during the qualifying match for 2014 World Cup.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Lieutenant Haydar Abbas-Zadeh made the announcement in an interview with Persian Gulf News Agency. “They were drinking alcohol,” Abbas-Zadeh said. “They also threw stones at the police, set trash on fire, broke street lights and destroyed public property.”

Iran ( Four Christians have been jailed for 4 years -For advertising Christianity ) Omg

Iranian regime jails four Christian for practising their religion
NCRI - Four Christians have been jailed for almost four years in Iran for disrupting national security by practising their religion.
Mojtaba Seyed Allaoding Hossein, Mohammad Reza Partoi (Kuroush), Vahid Hakani and Homayoun Shokuhi were arrested on February 7 this year after the security forces had raided their house meeting in Shiraz.
A church in IranThey were convicted of participating in house meetings, advertising Christianity, having connections with Christian Organizations abroad, propaganda against the government and disrupting the national security.
The Revolutionary Court in the city of Shiraz sentenced all of them to three years and eight months in prison.
Mr Hossein and Mr Shokuhi were also handed eight months suspended sentences and Fariba Nazemian and her 17 year-old son Nima Shokuhi were handed two year suspended prison sentences.

Iran ( Two journalists placed in Evin Prison - After government corruption article ) No charge

Two imprisoned journalists detained without charge

Posted on: 15th June, 2013
 
Ali Ghazali Favad Sadeghi & Ali Ghazali are Iranian journalists. Photo from archive
HRANA News Agency – Two Iranian journalists, Favad Sadeghi and Ali Ghazali, are detained in Ward 240 of Evin Prison without charge. Sadeghi and Ghazali have been in prison for 28 and 47 days respectively.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), both journalists work for Baztab, a website that publishes news and other related information in Iran. Sadeghi and Ghazali were arrested after Baztab published two reports about financial corruptions of Iranian government officials.
Sadeghi is married and has a two-year-old toddler and a 6-month-old infant. His two-year-old child who suffered violent convolutions before Sadeghi was arrested is reportedly in critical condition. For the last ten days, Sadeghi’s children have been denied the opportunity to visit their father.
>

Iran News ( Iran’s Intelligence Agency has sent text messages to political activists - watch their steps )

Intelligence Agency sends threatening text messages to public

Posted on: 20th June, 2013
  • Print
  • Email
 
 

Intelligence Agency The Ministry of Intelligence & National Security of the Islamic Republic of Iran
HRANA News Agency – The Communications Headquarters of Iran’s Intelligence Agency has recently sent text messages to political activists and the general public, threatening them to watch their steps.

According to a report by Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), during the last few days, the Communications Headquarters has broadcast text messages as a warning to the public. “Your behavior is unacceptable,” the message says. “Repeating it will have legal repercussions.”

NFL News ( Murder suspect wanted - Arrest Warrant Issued for Patriots’ Aaron Hernandez )



WASHINGTON – An arrest warrant has been issued for New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez in connection with the murder of his friend, Odin Lloyd, U.S. media reported Friday.

CBS News and other media cited police sources as saying the 23-year-old star player, who is of Puerto Rican descent, would be accused of obstruction of justice for allegedly destroying evidence in the case.

ABC News, meanwhile, reported that the player, who was selected for the Pro Bowl following the 2011 season, intentionally destroyed his home’s security system, including video cameras.

Police also want to know why Hernandez hired a team of house cleaners to clean his house on Monday and why the cellphone he turned in to police had been shattered, ABC added.

A jogger discovered the body of the 27-year-old Lloyd on Monday evening less than a mile from Hernandez’s house, which is located 65 kilometers (40 miles) south of Boston.

Police said Lloyd, who was apparently killed in the pre-dawn hours of Monday, had been with Hernandez and two other men prior to his death. EFE

Death wish ( Vigilantes Block Highway in South Mexico to Demand Safety )



CHILPANCINGO, Mexico – A vigilante group in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero on Friday blocked the highway between the Mexican port of Acapulco and Zihuatanejo to demand that the federal government enact measures to restore safety to the region.

Residents of the Tecpan de Galeana municipality, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Zihuatanejo, blocked traffic on the federal highway starting Thursday “to demand that the president (Enrique Peña Nieto) clear the area of organized crime,” Leopoldo Soberanis told Efe.

In a statement over the phone, Soberanis, a leader of the self-described Citizen Self-Protection Group, said the presence of the Caballeros Templarios crime organization in the region “has hurt tourism and the production of our villages.”

The leader complained that the governor of Guerrero, Angel Aguirre Rivero, has “ignored people’s reports on the presence of the Caballeros Templarios,” a group that operates in several of the state’s municipalities including the tourist areas of Ixtapa and Zihuatanejo.

For that reason at least 600 armed men have had roadblocks set up since Thursday on the Acapulco-Zihuatanejo highway in six villages of Tecpan de Galeana, which has left hundreds of tourists stranded on the road.

Soberanis said the “Caballeros Templarios are robbing locals of their mango and coconut crops, they’re stealing trucks carrying livestock and collect protection money from storekeepers, cattlemen and business owners” in the area.

He also said they are suspected of being behind the deaths of 45 people and of disappearing 19 others since the beginning of the year.

Up to now not a single local or federal authority has showed up at the roadblocks to talk with the armed men or to try and clear the highway.

The Caballeros Templarios, which appeared in March 2011 as an offshoot of La Familia Michoacana cartel, has been identified as responsible for kidnappings, homicides, and the extortion of storekeepers and truckers. EFE