Journalists
in sentence
1139 examples of Journalists in a sentence
called for the resignation of N. Gregory Mankiw...”Of course, the Washington Post’s
journalists
know, on some level, that they were being unfair to Mankiw.
We will see more persecution of scientists, journalists, and businessmen, whose work with international charities, media, or corporations will now be construed as treachery.
There was a time when only a few NGOs voiced concerns about corruption, and every once in a while a couple of brave
journalists
managed to write about what they, and others, observed.
On Saturday, two senior
journalists
were detained for issuing statements critical of the crackdowns.
Most young journalists, especially those in radio, have been shocked by the censorship.
Many
journalists
spent time behind bars, and there was a price to be paid when the morning newspapers contained even accidental typos, such as occurred when a headline concerning a royal birthday read “suspicious” instead of “auspicious.”
Since January 2011, images of millions of women demonstrating alongside men have been beamed around the world by television journalists, posted on YouTube, and splashed on the front pages of newspapers.
We ask the President of the Russian Federation and urge the Russian government to protect people in danger and to ensure quick and effective investigations into the murders of human rights activists, journalists, and independent-minded jurists.
According to a report presented to the Council of Europe, a pattern of violence and legal abuses directed at
journalists
has begun to take root in several European countries, threatening to stifle free, independent media with censorship and intimidation.
Since late 2009, at least 17
journalists
have been killed or abducted in Europe in the course of their work.
Before that, in 2000-2007, some of Europe’s most celebrated
journalists
were assassinated, including Georgiy Gongadze in Ukraine, Elmar Huseynov in Azerbaijan, Anna Politkovskaya in Russia, and Hrant Dink in Turkey.
According to the South East Europe Media Organization (SEEMO), which monitors 20 countries in Eastern and Southeastern Europe, “pressure on
journalists
continues, and self-censorship appears to be the norm.”
Recent allegations of phone hacking and illegal payments to police officers at some British newspapers published by News International, a subsidiary of News Corporation, are a clear reminder that journalists, like anyone, may be corrupted and manipulated to serve unscrupulous masters.
Russia, Azerbaijan, and Belarus are of particular concern, given the high incidence of violent assaults on
journalists
and chronic impunity for perpetrators.
In France and Italy, politicians exert undue influence over public broadcasters, and in Turkey, more than 100
journalists
are currently in jail because of their work.
The threats to media freedom in Europe are all too apparent: intimidation, attacks, and murder; legal harassment and wrongful imprisonment; and official controls, criminal libel laws, and intolerable political and commercial pressure on
journalists.
The time has come for all concerned – journalists, civil-society groups, political parties, and citizens – to stand up for press freedom.
In doing so, he sent his Western allies – which have criticized the arrests of thousands of perceived opponents, including many journalists, following last month’s failed military coup – a powerful message: “I don’t need you.”
Other
journalists
volunteered, at great risk to themselves, to get the magazine out.
On October 16, the OLAF investigators briefed a packed room of
journalists
about the results.
Journalists
and human rights activists and lawyers – Anna Politkovskaya, Stanislav Markelov, Anastasia Baburova, Natalia Estemirova, and dozens of others – are murdered, and no one in the Kremlin seems to mind, because they are not really a part of the New Russia that Putin is building.
Politicians, commentators, activists, and
journalists
in each country are talking endlessly about the past.
Let us imagine, then, a Britain of tomorrow that includes parliamentarians who don’t know what led to World War I, or what the Enlightenment was;
journalists
who can’t write compellingly; attorneys and judges who can’t figure out their cases; and spies and diplomats who don’t speak the languages or understand the cultures in which they work.
I was recently asked by
journalists
whether inter-agency cooperation is sufficient and whether European mechanisms for sharing operational intelligence should be created.
One of the first comments I heard from
journalists
was that Abbas, a family man, went home at lunchtime and worked regular business hours.
Moreover, there has been no Chinese demographic expansion into Siberia, though many
journalists
and pundits have been peddling that story.
Besides, thanks to governmental control of public broadcasters and generous public subsidies to private media outlets, both sides can deploy a reliable army of fiercely motivated
journalists
and intellectuals whose incendiary comments are contributing to the conflict’s escalation.
With Tanzania’s
journalists
being threatened, assaulted, and kidnapped, our conversation remained confined to the mundane.
For months, President John Magufuli has been targeting his political opponents, attacking journalists, and closing news outlets.
But at the moment, an atmosphere of impunity is emboldening those intent on silencing human rights defenders, journalists, and opposition leaders.
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