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  • 1
    Apr
    2013
    12:25pm, EDT

    Freedom of the press returns to Myanmar after 50 years

    Lynn Bo Bo / EPA

    Journalists work in the Voice Weekly News Journal newsroom as they prepare for publication in Yangon, Myanmar.

    Lynn Bo Bo / EPA

    A Buddhist monk and a man read a new private daily newspaper in Yangon, Myanmar on April 1. Myanmar ended a five-decade state monopoly on daily news, when four privately owned newspapers hit the streets.

    Lynn Bo Bo / EPA

    A journalist works in the Voice Weekly News Journal newsroom in Yangon, Myanmar.

    Myanmar ended a five-decade state monopoly on daily news, when four privately owned newspapers hit the streets on Monday.

    In August of 2012, Myanmar's quasi-civilian government embarked on media reforms as part of its democratization program and recently granted licenses to 16 media groups to print daily papers. Only four publications were available on the first day that the reforms took effect.

    "All four papers sold out quickly today," Kyi Kyi, a roadside book vendor, told Reuters.

    "But it's very hard to predict their future sales since three of them were distributed free of charge today and the remaining one was sold at 150 kyat ($0.17) per copy." Continue reading.

    Myanmar media was ranked among the most oppressed during its military rule.

    -- European Pressphoto Agency, Reuters, Associated Press

    Khin Maung Win / AP

    A press operator holds a page of a daily newspaper at a printing press on April 1, in Yangon, Myanmar.

    Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters

    Workers arrange the pages of The Voice Daily newspaper at a press machine house in Yangon on April 1.

    Lynn Bo Bo / EPA

    A street vendor displays new private daily newspapers and journals to a taxi driver at a road of Yangon, Myanmar on April 1.

    10 comments

    I wonder if they have (The Archie's) in the press.

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    Explore related topics: asia, newspapers, journalism, myanmar, world-news, censorship
  • 31
    Dec
    2012
    5:02pm, EST

    Reuters cameraman wounded by Syrian sniper

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Ayman al-Sahili, a Reuters cameraman, receives first aid after he was shot in the leg by a sniper loyal to Syrian President Bashar el-Assad while filming on the front line in Syria's north city of Aleppo on Dec. 31.

    By Reuters

    A Reuters television cameraman was shot in the leg and wounded while filming on the front line in Syria's northern city of Aleppo on Monday.

    Ayman al-Sahili, a Libyan citizen working as part of a Reuters multi-media reporting team, was hit by a rifle bullet fired from a distance. He was treated in Syria and then driven across the border to Turkey. His injury was not life-threatening.

    The ambulance transporting Sahili to Turkey encountered an air strike in Aleppo and maneuvered into an alley until it was safe to continue the journey.

    Syria was by far the most dangerous country for journalists in 2012, with 28 killed there during the year according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, a watchdog group. Read the full story.

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Ayman al-Sahili is carried on a stretcher after he was wounded by a sniper loyal to Syrian President Bashar el-Assad in Syria's north city of Aleppo on Dec. 31.

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Ayman al-Sahili is carried away in Syria's north city of Aleppo on Dec. 31.

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    A Free Syrian Army fighter pulls a boy off the street as a sniper fires during fighting with forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar el-Assad in Aleppo city on Dec. 31.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Israeli airstrike hits media building in Gaza, killing leading militant
    • Photographers join together to raise money for a fallen colleague
    • Three photojournalists killed as Mexico drug cartels target media
    • Colleagues mourn TV cameraman shot dead on Lebanon-Syria border
    • The work of photographer Remi Ochlik, killed in Syria
    • Attacks in Syria kill several, including French journalist

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country

    Launch slideshow

     

    11 comments

    How could anyone possibly know who the "sniper" was "loyal to"? Call me skeptical, but I think this might just be the new "babies pulled from incubators" story....

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    Explore related topics: media, middle-east, reuters, journalist, syria, journalism, conflict, world-news
  • 17
    Oct
    2012
    6:36pm, EDT

    In reforming Myanmar, junta mouthpiece gets makeover

    Reuters

    Employees get freshly printed copies of the New Light of Myanmar at the newspaper's office in Naypyitaw, Sept. 19, 2012. Established in 1993, the state-run New Light of Myanmar is the country's only English-language daily newspaper. It will soon face competition from private publishers and is undergoing a redesign.

    Reuters

    Editor-in-chief Than Myint Tun holds up a dummy of the New Light of Myanmar in Naypyitaw, Sept. 19.

    Reuters reports — The New Light of Myanmar has an image problem. That's putting it mildly.

    Created in 1993 as the mouthpiece of a military junta, the newspaper once described democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi as "obsessed by lust and superstition," while praising the achievements of generals who kept Myanmar in poverty and fear. Its nickname was "The New Lies of Myanmar."

    Now, with the junta gone and a reformist government in power, the mouthpiece is getting a makeover.

    "Feel free to ask me any question! We are very transparent now!" cries Than Myint Tun, its affable, betel-nut-chewing editor-in-chief during a Reuters tour of the state-run newspaper, the first by the international media.

    The New Light is the country's only English-language daily -- but not for long. Among its reforms since taking power last year, Myanmar's quasi-civilian government has effectively scrapped censorship, boosting an already vibrant weekly newspaper scene. It will allow the publication of privately owned dailies in early 2013.

    With competition looming, the long-derided New Light is battling for relevance and readers.

    Hate-filled propaganda has been replaced by lively editorials and entertainment news. Cartoons that once showed Suu Kyi as a toothless crone now comment on hot issues such as political transparency and the popularity of Western dress. Full story…

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This story was made available to NBC News on Oct. 17, 2012.

    Reuters

    Employees manually insert advertising supplements into freshly printed copies of the New Light of Myanmar at the newspaper's office in Naypyitaw, Sept. 18.

    Reuters

    Employees manually insert advertising supplements into freshly printed copies of New Light of Myanmar at the newspaper's office in Naypyitaw, Sept, 18.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

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    Explore related topics: asia, journalism, myanmar, world-news, aung-san-suu-kyi, burma
  • 4
    May
    2012
    6:49pm, EDT

    Russian newspaper Pravda (Truth) celebrates its 100th anniversary

    Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA

    Spekhov Yevgeny, editor of correspondence department, shows an issue of paper 'Pravda' from 10 May 1945 after the capitulation of Nazi Germany in the editorial office of Russian Communist party newspaper 'Pravda' (Truth) in Moscow, Russia on Friday. Russian celebrate 100 year anniversary of the first issue of the newspaper 'Pravda' which was published on 05 May 1912 in St. Petersburg, becoming the biggest newspaper during the Soviet period of the Russian history and the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party from 1912 until 1991 when the paper was closed down after the decree of the President Boris Yeltsin. In 1997 Russian communists recovered 'Pravda' as an official paper of the Russian Communist party.

    Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA

    A journalist works near the memorial working place (R) of the wife of Vladimir Lenin Nadezhda Krupskaya in the editorial office of Russian Communist party newspaper 'Pravda' (Truth) in Moscow.

    Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA

    Pre-anniversary issues of paper 'Pravda' (Truth) are pictured while on the production line at the printing works outside Moscow.

    Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters

    Boris Komotsky, editor of Pravda newspaper, works at his desk in an office, with an image of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin seen in the background, at Moscow.

    Reuters reports that the 100-year-old Russian newspaper is still 'urging the workers of the world to unite':

    Times are hard. But its editor says that battling hostile authorities, the threat of closure and financial problems is how Pravda spent its early years after first appearing in St Petersburg on May 5, 1912, until the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.

    "In many respects our role and purpose has gone back to what it was before 1917," Boris Komotsky said in his office in Moscow's Pravda Street, a huge photograph of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin reading Pravda on the wall behind him.

    "We are the opposition's main organ, fighting for power, for policy changes. We've gone though so many problems. Now each of the workers here is a hero. At times they've had to work without getting a paycheck."

    There's a newspaper in America with the same name - in English. The Elkhart Truth, in northern Indiana, worked together with msnbc.com to produce the Elkhart Project, a yearlong series of reports about a region hit particularly hard by the recent recession.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    I remember I was reading PRAVDA with my grandfather, when I was a kid. He was blind, so he asked me to read it to him.

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    Explore related topics: russia, journalism, world-news, newspaper, communism, pravda
  • 20
    Jan
    2012
    8:03pm, EST

    The Pacific Newspaper Group is ordered to provide unpublished Stanley Cup riot photos to the Vancouver Police

    By Robert Hood

    The Pacific Newspaper Group reports on its website:

    Last year, Pacific Newspaper Group (The Province and The Vancouver Sun) successfully fought a court order to surrender to the Vancouver Police Department all images and video produced by our respective newsrooms on the night of the Stanley Cup riot.

    The VPD modified its original application to the court and a new order to surrender images and video was delivered late last year to both newsrooms.

    Based on legal opinion, Pacific Newspaper Group will comply with the order and deliver the materials to the VPD by the Jan. 21 deadline.

    As a result of this decision, The Vancouver Sun and The Province have decided to make all the images we intend to surrender to police available first to our readers. The following images and videos represent the entirety of materials we will deliver, through our lawyer, to the VPD.

    vancouversun.com

    Screensnap of the Vancouver Sun website

    I remember a day, too long ago, when I was a young photographer at a small daily Wyoming newspaper. I was driving down the road when the police scanner in my jeep went off with a call for backup at a convenience store that was right around the corner. I quickly changed lanes and pulled into the store’s parking lot. I threw the vehicle in park, grabbed my camera and started making pictures. I was young and inexperienced. Nervous excitement got the best of me. My camera settings were all wrong as I made a few bad pictures of two police officers taking down a suspect.

    The newspaper ended up not using the pictures, but the next day a police detective showed up in the newsroom asking for copies of the pictures. To my surprise, the managing editor ran the detective off and then sat me down to dispense a little newsroom learnin’. He explained that journalists are not an information gathering arm of law enforcement. He told me that the newspaper would have a very difficult time reporting on drug abuse, police corruption or anything else that might involve the police if we started handing over our unpublished photographs and interview notes to the police.

    At the time I felt like I was in a difficult position. I understood the ideals my editor was talking about, but as a photojournalist I needed to have a working relationship with the police. I ran into them every day at crime scenes, traffic accidents, fires and even high school ball games. I also believe that there is a natural desire in law-abiding citizens to help the police.

    However, I’ve come to understand much more deeply what my editor was getting at that day, and that knowledge makes what’s happening to the Vancouver Sun and Province newspapers so painful.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

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    Explore related topics: canada, journalism, british-columbia, photography, world-news, vancouver, photojournalism
  • 13
    Dec
    2011
    2:00pm, EST

    Journalists protest killings of colleagues in Honduras

    Orlando Sierra / AFP - Getty Images

    A Honduran soldier, member of the presidential guard, clashes with demonstrators protesting against the murder of colleagues in Tegucigalpa on Monday. In the past two years, and under the government of Porfirio Lobo, 17 journalists have been killed in Honduras.

    Orlando Sierra / AFP - Getty Images

    Journalists lie and sit on the ground in front of the presidential palace while protesting against the murder of colleagues in Tegucigalpa on Monday.

    Orlando Sierra / AFP - Getty Images

    A journalist with his mouth taped takes part in a a protest against the murder of colleagues in Tegucigalpa on Monday.

    From this story about the killing of radio news host Luz Marina Paz:

    Human rights advocates say at least 23 journalists have been killed in Honduras since 2007, many for angering organized criminals and drug traffickers with their work. The Miami-based Inter American Press Association said Paz, who also owned her own business, had received death threats from criminals to whom she had refused to pay extortion.

    "These new attacks are part of a campaign of violence and insecurity in general, and of threats and intimidation against editors and journalists in particular that we have been denouncing in Honduras," said the president of the group's committee on press freedom, Gustavo Mohme.

    Almost half of the cocaine that reaches the United States is now offloaded somewhere along the country's coast and heavily forested interior, according to U.S. and Honduran estimates.

    Related stories:

    • Assailants open fire on Honduras newspaper office
    • Honduran journalists face 'growing threat'
    • Honduras bans motorcycle passengers in anti-crime move

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: protest, journalism, honduras, world-news
  • 19
    Aug
    2011
    7:34am, EDT

    Do only pretty blondes graduate from UK schools?

    One of the founders of the "Sexy A-levels" blog told msnbc.com it was born out of a desire "to satirize and poke fun" at the media's coverage of the day high school students get their final report cards.

    by Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    LONDON — Based on the coverage in many British newspapers, readers could be forgiven for thinking that the vast majority of students who received their final high school report cards Thursday were pretty blonde girls who are fond of low-cut tops and joyful leaping.

    But that, of course, would be wrong, so how could it happen? Amid much soul-searching about standards in the U.K.'s media following the phone-hacking scandal, revelations have emerged about just how low high schools will stoop to collude with the press and compete for publicity on what has become branded "Sexy A-levels" day.

    Normally details of how well students have done in their A-level exams — essentially the British equivalent of final exams and SATs combined — lead to newspaper debates over whether the tests have been deliberately made easier to boost the results artificially. The accompanying photographs of good-looking girls with top marks go largely unnoticed.

    But this year, Chris Cook, a journalist on the respected and slightly dry Financial Times newspaper, has lifted the lid on some of the rather seedy ways that schools and papers set up the shots.

    In an article entitled, "We're just not that kind of newspaper," he detailed a slightly creepy message left by a public relations officer for Badminton School in Bristol, a private school for girls, on his voicemail last year.

    'Amazing girls'
    "Hi Chris, ... Just wanting to give you some details of some absolutely beyootiful [beautiful, but pronounced with emphasis] girls we've got here who are getting their A-level results tomorrow. Some lovely stories ... they're amazing girls," the message from the unnamed publicist said, according to Cook's article. (The Financial Times operates behind a paywall.)

    He also said that Bedales School, a private school for girls and boys, "helpfully supplies photos to journalists."

    "Oddly, it seems to forget to send out any photos of its male students (or dowdier girls)," Cook wrote.

    He added that a"very grand" private school, which he did not name, had invited a Financial Times staffer to an end-of-year sports event, with a teacher saying that watching the girls would provide a "unique opportunity to pick out promising candidates for A-level day pictures."

    The Guardian newspaper, in its live blog Thursday, the day the results came out, said that by about 10 a.m. local time just four out of 45 photographs of students sent in by picture agencies were of boys, a staggeringly low rate of just under 9 percent.

    At least one blogger noticed the preponderance of attractive young women in the coverage of annual exam results as far back as 2009.

    The blog, called simply "Sexy A-levels", says its purpose is to explore "the hypothesis that U.K. newspapers believe that only attractive girls in low-cut tops do A-levels." The three people behind it note their "growing sense of disquiet."

    It lists several pages of pictures from local and national newspapers, mostly of girls, many engaging in the almost obligatory, celebratory group leaps. By Thursday, the blog had been "liked" on Facebook 9,380 times, up from 5,000 last year.

    London-based journalist Tom Phillips, one of the people behind the blog, told msnbc.com in an email that the blog was born out of a desire "to satirize and poke fun" at the media's coverage of the results.

    'Perving' over teens
    He said its main aim was "to be funny," but he stressed was also a serious point. "We do get quite worried that some people seem to be taking it as an endorsement of perving over 18-year-old girls," he said.

    Phillips said a large number of Britain's photo editors were likely to be middle-aged men and suggested this might lead to "some subconscious bias" and "to be honest, entirely conscious in some cases."

    While there was nothing wrong with "celebrating bright, blonde girls who've excelled academically," Phillips said he felt there should be "a bit more space to celebrate others as well."

    Photographers, he added, should also find other ways of illustrating joy at good results than simply "making them jump in the air in a rather unconvincing way."

    Phillips said he had noted a change in coverage this year, saying there had been "definitely more boys, less jumping" and even "pictures of people looking miserable."

    The front page of Friday's Daily Telegraph newspaper.

    Sadie Wearing, a lecturer in gender theory, culture and media at the prestigious London School of Economics, told msnbc.com that the newspapers were doing "what papers routinely do, which is to equate women's performance with the way that they look, so that becomes the story."

    "This seems to happen even when the story is ostensibly about young women's achievement," she said.

    Wearing, who said she had not seen the pictures, said Cook's description of private schools' efforts to get their students in newspapers sounded "particularly distasteful."

    It was just one of the signs of the continuing inequality between the genders.

    "There's already a story out there that feminism is over; there's no need for it anymore because young women are equal and so on," Wearing said. "It doesn't seem to me that the battle has been won." 

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  • 8
    Aug
    2011
    7:33pm, EDT

    Newsweek catches criticism for 'biased' Michele Bachmann cover photo

    Newsweek

    Michele Bachmann on Newsweek's cover.

    Related links:

    NBC's Brian Williams reports on Nightly News.

    Check out what the Washington Post says about the cover photo.

    Read what Slate reports.

     Newsweek posted outtakes from the photographer's shoot on their website.


    14 comments

    She looks crazy in ALL photos I've seen of her. The Newsweek photographer isn't the problem.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: politics, journalism, us-news
  • 11
    May
    2011
    11:39am, EDT

    Family pleads for information on photographer detained in Libya

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Update 5/19/2011 - The family of missing South African photojournalist Anton Hammerl say they now believe he was killed in the Libyan desert on April 5th by Moammar Gadhafi's forces. Full story

    Update 5/18/2011 - Libya released four journalists today: Americans Clare Morgana Gillis and James Foley, along with Spaniard Manuel Varela and Briton Nigel Chandler. There was no word on the fate of photojournalist Anton Hammerl. Full story 

    Original post 5/11/2011 - Concern is growing for South African photographer Anton Hammerl, who has been missing in Libya for 37 days. Hammerl is believed to have been captured near Brega on April 5 with Spanish photographer Manu Brabo and two American journalists, James Foley and Clare Gillis.

    courtesy Unai Aranzadi

    South African photographer Anton Hammerl working on the front line in Brega, Libya before his disappearance. Hammerl has been missing in Libya since Tuesday, April 5th.

    The Global Post reported yesterday that an intermediary had been allowed to visit Foley and Gillis in detention in Tripoli. "The intermediary said Gillis and Foley reported that Brabo was also in the same detention facility, but that they did not know the whereabouts of Hammerl," the Post said.

    Gabriel Pecot / AP file

    Spanish photographer Manuel Varela de Seijas Bravo, who works under the name of Manu Brabo, is seen working in Ben Gardane in Tunisia on March 3.

    In a statement released today, Hammerl's wife Penny Sukhraj spoke of the family's concern:

    "The Libyans have made good on their promises and allowed intermediate access to James Foley and Clare Gillis, and we rejoice with these families. The two, and Spanish photographer Manu Brabo, have also been allowed calls to family.

    "But we are not even sure where Anton is being held. And it is now late in the day – we are terribly distressed around the growing uncertainty of things.

    "Why is there still a no-show where Anton is concerned – where is our husband, father, brother and son?

    "Why is he being treated differently?

    "Why won't they give us or consular officials access to him?"

    Andy Rain / EPA

    The son of photographer Anton Hammerl, Neo, lights a candle during a vigil for his missing father at St. Bride's Church in central London on May 3. A vigil was held on World Press Freedom Day to mark Hammerl's 29th day in captivity in Libya.

    On Saturday, South African photographer Jodi Bieber made an emotional appeal for help in locating Hammerl. Speaking as she accepted the award for World Press Photo of the year, Bieber called on the wider photojournalism community to act for his release. "Let's help our community stay alive," she implored.

    Related links:

    Free photographer Anton Hammerl Facebook page.
    Free Manu Brabo from Libya Facebook page.
    Help Free James Foley and Clare Gillis Facebook page.
    Images by Manu Brabo on PhotoBlog.

     

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Robert Hood

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