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Posts Tagged ‘freedom of the press

“Freedom of expression must be limited.”

That’s what Venezuela’s Attorney General Luisa Ortega said late last week when defending tough new legislation which would restrict what can be said on radio and television in Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela. No sooner had this statement been made did Venezuela announce the closing of some 34 radio stations:

More than a dozen of 34 radio stations ordered shut by the Venezuelan government went off the air on Saturday, part of President Hugo Chavez’s drive to extend his socialist revolution to the media.

The association of radio broadcasters said 13 stations had stopped transmitting, following an announcement Friday night by government broadcasting watchdog Conatel that 34 radio outlets would be closed because they failed to comply with regulations.

While I was shocked at the Chavez-ordered takeover of RCTV in 2007, I am not shocked by this massive squashing of freedom of speech and freedom of the press in these radio station closings. I’m just disgusted.

And so are lots of others. Protests have spontaneously broken out around Venezuela but I fear there is nothing to do now. How do you fight against this ideology?

We haven’t closed any radio stations, we’ve applied the law,” Chavez said on state television. “We’ve recovered a bunch of stations that were outside the law, that now belong to the people and not the bourgeoisie.”

Translation: “We’re closing down a bunch of stations that have criticized me because we can.”

A sad, sad time for Venezuela and I think it’s only going to get worse. One ray of light: activists are using Twitter to get the word out to the rest of the world on what’s going on in Venezuela. For updates, check out hashtag #FreeMediaVe on Twitter.com.

Via / Reuters

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Journalists wield a long banner for freedom of the press

3:48 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Media|Politics|Venezuela · Comments Off

21 May 2007

2105pancartag05.gifFreedom of the press doesn’t appear to be alive and well in Chavez’s Venezuela. In drastic moves like revoking the license of the country’s oldest television network, to more below-the-radar moves, Hugo Chavez has taken steps to control what media says about his government. Many journalists, not surprisingly, are outraged, and hundreds took to the streets of Caracas today to protest. In more than just a march, they took a document to the European Union and the Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA) headquarters to

“express their concerns about freedom of the press in Venezuela and the closing of Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV).”

The journalists carried what they referred to as the “longest protest banner in Latin America”, which stretched over half a mile and weighed almost 400 lbs.

Via / El Universal (Venezuela)

Image via El Impulso, by Globovision

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Picture%206.pngWe get a lot of comments on this blog when people don’t like what we write, saying that “real journalists” would try harder to show both sides, check facts more diligently, not be biased, be more objective, etc. etc. I chuckle when I read these comments because neither Maegan or myself think we are traditional “journalists” and we don’t pretend to objective either.

We are a lot of other things, among them blogger, writer, artist, business people, parent, activist and a host of other words can describe us. We’re not journalists in the traditional sense. We are regular people who care enough about something (Latino issues) to post about it every day, and state our opinions. BUT, we are in fact the media. Right?

If a controversy that has unfolded right here in San Francisco is to be a case study on that statement, the government probably doesn’t share that sentiment. Today San Francisco blogger Josh Wolf becomes the journalist (there’s that word again) who has spent the most time in prison for refusing to hand over information to the U.S. Government. While his friends and family held a press conference at our City Hall this afternoon to rally support for his release, Josh sat in a Federal prison in Dublin, California, all because the government doesn’t buy that he deserves the journalist’s right to withhold information.

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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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