December 22, 2008
Attack on Himalmedia Violates Press Freedom, Says IFJ
The
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) strongly condemns the repeated
attacks against offices and personnel of the Himalmedia group of
publications, by individuals believed to be associated with the Communist Party
of Nepal (Maoist), the principal constituent of the ruling coalition in Nepal.
According to information
received from the Federation of Nepali Journalists (FNJ), an IFJ affiliate, the
chief executive of Himalmedia, its editor and publisher were among twelve
people injured in an attack by a mob shouting Maoist slogans just after noon on
December 21.
About 50 people are believed
to have participated in the attack, including Maoist leaders who have been
identified by reliable eye-witnesses.
This mob, the IFJ is
informed, forced their way into the Himalmedia premises and began physically
assaulting staff members, while loudly proclaiming that this was in retaliation
for material published in the group's papers about the Maoists' misdeeds.
The IFJ learns that current
issues of Himalmedia group publications - the Nepali language daily, Himal
Khabarpatrika and the English-language weekly, Nepali Times - carry
investigative stories about Maoist militants who have been threatening
businesses and the media.
"This
attack on Himalmedia is an attack on press freedom and has nothing to do with
the defence of journalism or the public interest", said Jacqueline Park,
director of the IFJ Asia-Pacific.
The
IFJ calls on the authorities in Nepal to initiate immediate action against the attackers
their leaders, who have been identified in reports carried by the local media.
"We
call upon the political leadership in Nepal, including the Prime Minister and
the Minister for Information and Broadcasting, to promptly denounce this act of
vandalism and take personal responsibility for ensuring that the guilty are
appropriately sanctioned", said Park.
The
IFJ supports FNJ's plans to hold demonstrations in protest against this
incident, which is the latest in a disturbing pattern of attacks on the media,
seemingly with official sanction.
The
IFJ is disturbed to learn that well established procedures of registering
unions within the journalists' community, are being shredded by a collusive
arrangement between the Labour Minister in the newly sworn Republican
Government of Nepal and vigilante groups that have emerged over the last decade
of the Maoist insurgency.
"We
call on all political parties in Nepal, and the wider civil society,
to apply existing rules on the recognition of journalists' trade unions", said
the IFJ Asia-Pacific.
"Any
amendments to these rules should come from a broad process of consultation,
rather than be forced upon one or the other side by mob action".
For further
information contact IFJ Asia-Pacific
on +612 9333 0919
The IFJ represents
over 600,000 journalists in 123 countries










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