Saturday, May 2, 2015

Journalists And Religion Are Under Worldwide Assault: Report


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Journalists And Religion Are Under Worldwide Assault: Report

Two reports, both released in Washington this week, document a decline in journalistic freedom and religious freedom for 2014 — the consequence of an increasingly unstable and authoritarian world.
“Ladies and gentlemen, I’m sorry to tell you, the news is bleak,” announced Vanessa Tucker of Freedom House at the release of the NGO’s annual Freedom of the Press report Wednesday. According to the group’s metrics, freedom for journalists to operate freely dropped last year to its lowest point in a decade. Freedom House’s report shows that the collapse of press freedom occurred not only in autocracies, but in vibrantly democratic countries, “including Greece, Hong Kong, Iceland, Serbia, and South Africa.”
Tools used to oppress journalists today include restrictive laws on speech (including security laws or states of emergency); impassable areas that constitute virtual “black boxes” of information, such as territory controlled by the Islamic State terror group; and threats of violence by governments, individuals or groups. The report also discusses the use of propaganda to silence dissenting voices, as well as government coercion of public or major private news outlets. (RELATED: Thailand’s Prime Minister Could ‘Probably Just Execute’ Journalists)
Speaking at Freedom House’s launch event, Middle East reporter Thanassis Cambanis recounted another jarring example of attempted repression: clumsy wiretaps and instances of government surveillance, which consequently follows him throughout his work in the region. He also noted that the pervasive use of overt “media guidelines” regulating journalists’ behavior has even influenced Islamic State policy, with the group issuing a list of rules for reporters in its territory that was “uncannily” similar to Coalition press guidelines he had seen reporting on the Iraq war a decade ago.
Despite the high-profile murder of cartoonists at French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, European and North American countries are largely free from the kind of restrictions measured by the report. In one of its most harrowing findings, Freedom House concluded that 86% of the world’s population lives in countries where journalists are either “not free” or only “partly free.”
Meanwhile, the government-appointed U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom unveiled its review of religious persecution worldwide on Thursday. USCIRF’s report focuses on 33 countries that it claims are the world’s most egregious violators of religious freedom, noting violence and oppression committed by governments as well as lawless groups and individuals.(RELATED: With Blogger’s Fate Unclear, Americans Offer To Take Saudi Blasphemy Whippings)
In remarks to the press, the panel’s chair Katrina Lantos Swett said that “across the world, we see little evidence that religious freedom is on the rise.” With few exceptions, the countries that USCIRF tracks have continued to see crimes and harassment target members of all faiths, and no faith at all, for the beliefs that they hold. She mentioned a number of particular targets of religious oppression in 2014, including those affected by Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria — “from Yezidis to Christians, Shias to dissenting Sunnis, no group has been free” of the group’s atrocities.
USCIRF operates within a delicate balance of government entities responsible for monitoring and responding to religious freedom conditions worldwide. The State Department is legally required to issue an annual list of “countries of particular concern” for religious freedom infractions based on USCIRF’s recommendations, a practice that has been spotty under President Barack Obama’s two terms.
The department also includes an Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom, who occupies a post that has gone vacant for more than half of Obama’s time in office. The current ambassador, Rabbi David Saperstein, was officially took up the capacity in February, after delays during which he reportedly fought for greater independence and power in the department.(RELATED: Meet The New Religious Freedom Ambassador)
USCIRF’s Swett also addressed those who say the president has ignored the ideological roots of terrorist atrocities against Christians and other religious groups, saying, “When violent, vicious, murderous crimes take place against people, if those crimes have a religious basis, that has to be identified.” Noting that Obama’s statement on the beheading of 28 Ethiopian Christians in Libya explicitly noted their faith, “if there was a misstep in the past, corrections have taken place.”
Amid the seemingly endless horrors perpetrated against individuals in 2014 on the basis of religion, conscience or belief, Swett hoped the report would be “a spur to the President, Congress and State Department to raise the profile of religious freedom concerns in policymaking.” As she put it, “the evidence is mounting that religious freedom correlates with and is a causal factor in a lot of positive democratic social outcomes.”
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Groups rally against "Religious Freedom" bill
KAKE - Wichita, KS

White House, Texas at odds over military drills decried by far right

White House, Texas at odds over military drills decried by far right

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott delivers his State of the State address to a joint session of the House and Senate, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2015, in Austin, Texas. Abbott told lawmakers that roads, education and border security are the biggest issues facing Texans.© AP Photo/Eric Gay Texas Gov. Greg Abbott delivers his State of the State address to a joint session of the House and Senate, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2015, in Austin, Texas. Abbott told lawmakers that roads, education and border security are the…A decision from Texas Governor Greg Abbott to deploy the Texas State Guard to monitor a U.S. military training exercise some conspiracy theorists see as a prelude for federal occupation was met with puzzlement by the White House on Wednesday.
"I have no idea what he's thinking," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told a news conference. The eight-week training exercise known as "Jade Helm 15" is a multi-state exercise with members of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command.
"The thing that I can say without having a lot of detailed knowledge about the particular exercise is that in no way will the constitutional rights or civil liberties of any American citizen be infringed upon while this exercise is being conducted," he said.
The exercise has served as a focal point among many in the far right who see the Obama administration as trying to force its will, strip citizens of their arms and impose federal control over states.
On Tuesday, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, directed the Texas State Guard to monitor the exercise to ensure the safety of the state's citizens.
"During the training operation, it is important that Texans know their safety, constitutional rights, private property rights and civil liberties will not be infringed," Abbott said.
His office did not immediately respond to a request to reply to the comment from the White House. The state has one of the largest populations of U.S. troops in the country.
A post on the Teaparty.org website claims that in more than 15 Texas cities special forces troops will try to blend in undetected among civilian populations to prepare for the imposition of martial law.
Earnest said he understands that individuals participating in the exercise will not be traveling incognito and will be wearing arm bands.
The U.S. Army Special Operations Command said in a March news release the operation will take place in states including Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado that have terrain similar to areas where Special Forces train overseas.
It will be mostly conducted in remote areas to help develop techniques and tactics for Special Operations warfare overseas, it said.
"This exercise is routine training to maintain a high level of readiness for Army Special Operations Forces since they must be ready to support potential missions anywhere in the world at a moment's notice," it said. (Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton in Washington; Editing by Eric Walsh)

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