The Department of Homeland Security is about to start cracking down on what they consider to be misinformation, but this program could easily be abused to shut down dissent. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more.
You could call it “death by a thousand leaks,” as the Republican Party continues to suffer from leak after leak about everything ranging from involvement in Trump’s coup attempts, to leaked audio of House Minority leader Kevin McCarthy wanting to get Trump out of office. Trump’s world is crashing down around him with these leaks, […]
A new study has found that states that legalize marijuana have seen a dramatic drop in prescription drug abuse among their residents. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: Yeah. That’s a point I really had not thought about it when I […]
America’s Lawyer E03: The Biden Administration is creating a new office at the Department of Homeland Security to monitor misinformation, and the impacts of this program could shut down independent media outlets for good. We’ll bring you the details. Gas prices are still going through the roof – but so are the profits and executive […]
Court documents have revealed some of the most disgusting secrets that Johnson & Johnson has been hiding from the public for decades. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: Court documents have revealed some of the most disgusting secrets that Johnson and […]
A Christian university is being investigated by the federal government for possible human trafficking violations. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: Yeah. A Christian university is being investigated by the federal government for possible human trafficking violations. Wow. I looked at […]
Climate activists recently blocked the entrances to major corporate news outlets in a protest over the lack of attention being paid to climate change. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: Climate activists recently blocked the entrances to major corporate news outlets […]
Some of Russia’s wealthiest citizens have been found dead since the start of the conflict with Ukraine, which could be a clear sign that Russia is still trying to punish dissent. Ring of Fire’s Farron Cousins joins me to talk about this story, and many others. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by […]
The biggest producers of baby formula on the planet have been pushing their products relentlessly to consumers. And now that a devastating disease has been linked to their products in premature babies, the public is finally starting to pay attention. Mike Papantonio is joined by attorney Sara Papantonio to explain what’s happening. Click here to […]
An analysis of IRS data has revealed that the wealthiest Americans are paying income tax rates far lower than working class Americans – and the usual suspects are the ones paying the least. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: An […]
Ron DeSantis’s attacks on Disney haven’t phased the company one bit – but Florida taxpayers could feel the pressure very soon. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: Department of Justice, I say it again and again, if it’s not low […]
The Biden administration has made a dangerous decision to NOT regulate chemicals from jet fuel that are contaminating water supplies for millions of Americans. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: It’s inevitable. It’s gonna, they’re gonna unionize. The, you know, […]
5 million refugees are fleeing the Ukraine without much of a plan to tell them what we’re going to do to help them, as they leave that war torn country. Mike Papantonio is joined by Donniya Davies from the Sanctuary Foundation to talk about what we can do to welcome Ukrainian refugees into our community. Transcript: *This […]
Amazon is so scared of their workers forming a union that they’ve banned words like “union” from the company’s chat app for workers. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: Amazon is so scared of their workers forming a union that […]
America’s Lawyer E02: Russian oligarchs are dying at an unusually high rate, with half a dozen found dead since the start of Russia’s attack on Ukraine. We’ll be looking at these deaths and what it could possibly mean as this conflict drags on. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has declared War on Disney, but taxpayers in […]
On episode 75 of Cut to the Chase:, Mike Papantonio Senior Partner at the powerful Levin Papantonio Rafferty law firm in Pensacola, Florida discusses the latest development in the world of mass torts-cow based milk formula for premature babies. The formula is causing life threatening gastronintestinal disorders of the worst kind and he is leading […]
Toxic chemicals called PFAS are being spread across the globe in alarming amounts, and a new report warns about the dangers of these chemicals now being spread through the air. Ring of Fire’s Farron Cousins joins me to talk about this, and many other issues today. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Click here to find out more […]
America’s Lawyer E01: Amazon is banning certain words like “union” and “pay raise” from a company app for employees, as they grow more and more terrified of an organized workforce. We’ll bring you the details. President Biden’s approval rating is in a freefall, and his behavior has gotten so bad that even Saudi Arabia is […]
The state of Florida is working to become one of the most oppressive states in the nation, as Republican Ron DeSantis continues to stress culture war issues. But behind his assault on our rights lies an economy that is in utter shambles, with more and more workers and residents struggling to stay above water. Ring […]
Nairobi, March 17, 2022 — Ugandan authorities should unconditionally release The Alternative Digitalk television journalists Norman Tumuhimbise and Faridah Bikobere, drop any pending investigations against seven other journalists from the online media outlet, and rigorously investigate allegations that at least two of these journalists suffered serious physical abuse while in the custody of security personnel, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.
On the afternoon of March 10, a group of armed police and military officers raided the offices of The Alternative Digitalk, arresting the nine and confiscating equipment, including cameras, laptops, and books, according to mediareports, a statement by the local press rights group Human Rights Network for Journalists-Uganda (HRNJ-U), as well as police and court documents reviewed by CPJ.
The journalists arrested that day are Norman Tumuhimbise, The Alternative Digitalk’s executive director who is also an activist and a published author; programs director Arnold Mukose; TV host Faridah Bikobere; producer Jeremiah Mukiibi; presenters Lilian Luwedde, Teddy Teangle Nabukeera, Tumusiime Kato, and Rogers Tulyahabwe; and an intern, Jacob Jeje Wabyona, according to Tumuhimbise’s brother Innocent Ainebyona, who spoke to CPJ via messaging app, and the HRNJ-Ustatement.
On March 15 and 16, seven of the journalists were released on police bond, but are still under investigation on charges of sedition and cyberstalking, according to human rights lawyer Eron Kiiza and the HRNJ-U-appointed lawyer Geoffrey Turyamusima, both of whom are working on the case and spoke to CPJ via messaging app.
Two journalists, Tumuhimbise and Bikobere, remain in jail, and were charged with cyberstalking and “offensive communication,” during a court hearing in the capital Kampala on March 16, according to Turyamusima andcourt documents reviewed by CPJ. During the hearing, Bikobere and Tumuhimbise told the court they had been severely physically abused while in state custody, Ainebyona and Turyamusima told CPJ.
“Authorities should unconditionally release Norman Tumuhimbise and Faridah Bikobere, drop all charges against them, end all investigations against other The Alternative Digitalk journalists, and return their confiscated equipment. Allegations that these journalists have been severely physically abused should be investigated credibly, holding anyone responsible to account,” said CPJ sub-Saharan Africa representative Muthoki Mumo. “President Yoweri Museveni, whose name has been invoked in these proceedings, should also declare that he is against arbitrary detentions of the press and condemn acts of abuse by security personnel.”
During a March 10, 2022, police and military raid on The Alternative Digitalk’s offices, officers confiscated equipment and arrested nine journalists. From left to right: programs director Arnold Mukose, producer Jeremiah Mukiibi, presenter Teddy Teangle Nabukeera, Musiitwa Elizabeth (who was not arrested), TV host Faridah Bikobere, presenter Tumusiime Kato, executive director Norman Tumuhimbise, and presenter Lilian Luwedde. (The Alternative Digitalk)
Cyberstalking and “offensive communication” can carry prison terms of up to five and two years respectively under Uganda’sComputer Misuse law. Sedition can carry up to seven years, according to the penal code.
Kiiza and Ainebyona told CPJ that The Alternative Digitalk is an offshoot of Alternative Uganda, an activist group headed by Tumuhimbise and of which Ainebyona is also a member, which campaigns for better governance in Uganda. On itssocialmediaaccounts, the group defines itself as a “non partisan (sic) and non-violent social movement” campaigning for “youth led change.”
CPJ’s review of The Alternative Uganda’s YouTube channel, where it has about 2,700 followers, and Facebook page, with over 24,300 followers, shows that it publishes The Alternative Digitalk’s programming, such as interviews, including with politicians and government officials, analysis of current affairs as well as entertainment and lifestyle programming.
In the court documents, police allege the offenses were committed by the journalists between January 2020 and March 9, 2022, against Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni in the form of content published by The Alternative Digitalk about two of Tumuhimbisi’s recently published books. The books, “The Komanyoko Politics: Unsowing the Mustard Seed” and “Liars and Accomplices,”are sharply critical of the Museveni government, according to mediareports, Kiiza, and CPJ’s review of “The Komanyoko Politics.” [Editor’s note: Komanyoko is a vulgar insult originally from Kiswahili.]
In severalYouTube andFacebookposts in late February and early March made by The Alternative Uganda, which streams The Alternative Digitalk’s content, The Alternative Digitalk advertised Tumuhimbise’s books and announced the planned March 30 launch event in Kampala. On March 1, the outlet published anhour-long interview with a retired judge who wrote the foreword to “The Komanyoko Politics.”
In that book, excerpts of which CPJ reviewed, Tumuhimbise’s commentary describes Uganda’s political culture as “vulgar” and full of “malice, fights, insults, greed.” He also alleges that the president “only tells the truth by mistake” and criticizes government appointments for Museveni’s family, including his son, Lieutenant General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, and wife, Janet Museveni.
Copies of this book were among those confiscated by the security officers who raided the media outlet’s offices, according to a police search certificate, a document outlining how the search was carried out and listing those who witnessed it, reviewed by CPJ. The officers also confiscated four cameras, microphones, several laptops, hard disks, as well as CDs and a company vehicle, according to that same document.
Police officers and military personnel raided The Alternative Digitalk offices on March 10, 2022, resulting in the arrest of nine journalists including, from left to right: presenters Tumusiime Kato and Rogers Tulyahabwe; programs director Arnold Mukose; and producer Jeremiah Mukiibi. (The Alternative Digitalk)
On March 16 and 17, when seven of the journalists were released on bond from the police’s Special Investigation Division in Kireka, a suburb of Kampala, two of them were limping, Ainebyona told CPJ. CPJ was unable to immediately communicate with the released journalists, whose phones were confiscated when they were arrested.
During the March 16 court hearing, Bikobere said she needed medical attention because she had been beaten by officers and was passing blood in her urine, according to Turyamusima. A video clip posted on YouTube shows part of Bikobere’s testimony in which she says she feels pain in her stomach, back, and chest; has bruises all over her body; and offers to “undress” so that her injuries can be put on record.
Jacob Jeje Wabyona, an intern for The Alternative Digitalk, was arrested on March 10 during a raid on the outlet’s offices. (The Alternative Digitalk)
Tumuhimbise also told the court that he had been beaten, saying he was punched in the head and forced to drink and unknown substance, according Ainebyona and Turyamusima. Both journalists were remanded to Luzira Prison in Kampala until their next hearing on March 21.
Uganda military spokesperson Brigadier General Felix Kulayigye told CPJ by phone that the military’s involvement in the raid on The Alternative Digitalk was in support of a police operation and referred CPJ to the police for comment. Kulayigye declined to answer questions on allegations of torture, saying the journalists had not been in the army’s custody.
Calls and text messages to Uganda police spokesperson Fred Enanga and President Museveni’s senior press secretary Nabusayi Lindah Wamboka were unanswered.
New York, March 17, 2022 — The Taliban must immediately release journalist Bahram Aman, a news presenter at independent broadcaster TOLOnews, and stop detaining and intimidating members of the Afghanistan press corps, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.
On Thursday, March 17, Taliban agents from the General Directorate of Intelligence detained Aman as well as TOLOnews news manager Khapalwak Sapai and the channel’s legal adviser at its headquarters in District 10 of Kabul, the capital, according to BBC Persian and tweets by former TOLOnews journalists.
The former news director Lotfullah Najafizada said in a tweet that Aman remained in custody while the others were released. None of the sources named the legal adviser who was detained.
The Taliban has not confirmed detention of the three. Jawad Sargar, deputy director of the GDI’s directorate of media and publication, denied the detentions in response to a request for comment sent via messaging app.
“The Taliban must immediately release TOLOnews journalist Bahram Aman, and stop its intelligence agency from arbitrarily arresting and intimidating media personnel,” said Steven Butler, CPJ’s Asia program coordinator, in Washington, D.C. “Afghanistan’s once thriving independent media community cannot operate effectively under constant Taliban threats and harassment.”
TOLOnews, a 24/7 news channel based in Afghanistan and owned by the United Arab Emirates-headquartered Moby Media Group, has continued to air news and current affairs since the takeover of Kabul by the Taliban on August 15, 2021. On Thursday, the Taliban’s Ministry of Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice in an official letter banned the airing of foreign soap operas by Moby Media Group’s TV stations, according to the Instagram page of independent Afghan news site Hasht-e Subh Daily and a Moby Media Group executive who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal.
CPJ has documented the increasingly prominent role of the intelligence agency in controlling news media and intimidating journalists in Afghanistan.
Brussels, March 10, 2022 — The European Union must strengthen its criticism of the deterioration of press freedom in Mexico and ensure that Mexican authorities guarantee immediate resourcing and funding of their protection program for journalists, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.
The European Parliament passed a resolution on Thursday, March 10, that condemns the killings of journalists in Mexico, providing a blueprint for further scrutiny of the situation by the EU.
In 2022, sixMexicanjournalistshavebeenkilled and two others have survivedattacks. The Federal Mechanism for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders and Journalists, set up by Mexican authorities in 2012 to provide protection measures for at-risk journalists, has been poorly resourced and staffed, as CPJ documented. While debating the passing of the resolution, members of the European Parliament called out Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador for his verbal attacks on the press.
“Mexican journalists are calling for change, and the European Parliament has today supported them in their calls,” said Jan-Albert Hootsen, CPJ’s Mexico representative, from Mexico City. “At best, President López Obrador has consistently shown that press freedom is not a priority for him, and at worse he has openly vilified journalists. This resolution must be now part of a concerted move for change, with the EU working in solidarity with journalists on the ground.”
During the debate, Vice President of the European Commission Věra Jourová noted that although the Federal Mechanism was an “interesting model,” there is a need for more comprehensive efforts to provide effective local protection and address the violence in Mexico.
An EU-Mexico Global Agreement, which regulates the conditions for trade and investment between the two sides and includes clauses on the protection of human rights, is currently being modernized.
“If the EU cannot stem the rise in violence against journalists by holding the Mexican authorities to account for human rights provisions of the EU-Mexico Global Agreement, then it must think about how it can improve its leverage,” said Tom Gibson, CPJ’s EU representative. “Journalists are being killed, and the EU cannot afford to brush this under the carpet.”
Miami, March 10, 2022 — Peru’s Congress should reject a bill that would criminalize reporting based on leaked information from informants cooperating in criminal investigations, as it would negatively impact journalists’ ability to operate, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.
On February 23, the Commission of Justice and Human Rights unanimously approved a bill that would amend several articles of the Code of Criminal Procedure and the penal code regarding “effective collaborators,” according to mediareports and a statement by the Lima-based regional group Institute of Press and Society (IPYS). An “effective collaborator” is someone who agrees to provide evidence for the prosecution in return for judicial lenience, although they are not always subject to the criminal investigation or proceeding, according to the Peruvian Prosecutor’s Office.
Under the proposed changes in the bill, anyone who reveals, even partly, the identity of an “effective collaborator” or the content of their testimony faces a prison sentence of between four and six years.
“The Peruvian Congress must reject this bill about ‘effective collaborators,’ as it risks criminalizing reporting based on leaked information from informants cooperating in criminal investigations,” said Natalie Southwick, CPJ’s Latin America and the Caribbean program coordinator, in New York. “A blanket prohibition on the publication of information stemming from the testimonies of informants, which can be of clear public interest, is incompatible with freedom of the press.”
In the past, informants’ testimonies have been leaked to journalists who then undertake their own investigations, according to Adriana León, director of Information Freedoms at IPYS, who spoke to CPJ via messaging app. León added that these testimonies were essential for the investigative reporting done by the Peruvian press in uncovering corruption in the country, especially in the well-known Lava Jato/Odebrecht and Montesinoscases.
The proposal is now ready for debate and vote before the plenary session of Congress, which could happen at any time now, according to León.
CPJ contacted the Peruvian Congress for comment by email, but the request went unanswered.
New Delhi, March 9, 2022 – Authorities in Chhattisgarh state and the Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir region must immediately release journalists Nilesh Sharma and Fahad Shah and drop all investigations launched based on their journalistic work, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Wednesday.
On March 2, police in Chhattisgarh’s capital Raipur arrested Sharma, editor of privately owned satirical news website Indiawriters.co.in, at his home, according to multiplenewsreports.
Separately, on Sunday, March 6, police in Jammu and Kashmir re-arrested Shah, editor of the privately owned news website The Kashmir Walla, hours after he was granted bail in another case, according to multiplenewsreports. This is the third time that Shah has been arrested since February 4, according to those reports and CPJdocumentation.
Both journalists remained in detention as of Wednesday morning, according to those sources, and have been accused of cognizable offenses, which allow police to arrest them without a warrant and begin an investigation without the permission of a court.
“The rapidly growing number of journalist detentions reflects India’s utter intolerance for press freedom and peaceful criticism of the state,” said Carlos Martinez de la Serna, CPJ’s program director, in New York. “Authorities must immediately release Nilesh Sharma and Fahad Shah, drop their investigations into their journalistic work, and take steps to reverse the escalating criminalization of journalism.”
On March 2, Raipur police filed a first information report, which opens a police investigation, against Sharma based on a complaint filed by Khilawan Nishad, a member of the Indian National Congress, the ruling party in Chhattisgarh, according to independent newspaper The Indian Express. Nishad alleged that characters in Sharma’s satirical columns resembled the party’s ministers and legislators, driving a “wedge between ministers,” according to a copy of his complaint, which CPJ reviewed.
In the report, police accused Sharma of violating four sections of the Indian penal code pertaining to intentional insult to provoke breach of peace, publication of statements conducive to public mischief, publishing rumors, and publishing statements promoting enmity between classes, according to newsreports and a copy of the first information report, which CPJ reviewed.
Each of those offenses can carry a prison sentence between two and three years, and an unspecified fine, according to the law.
On Monday, March 7, police claimed to have found “pornographic content” and “sensitive confidential documents” on Sharma’s phone and are now investigating him on additional counts of violating a section of the Information Technology Act pertaining to publication or transmission of material containing a sexually explicit act, and two sections of the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act pertaining to living on the earnings of prostitution and procuring or inducing prostitution, according newsreports and a copy of a police statement, which CPJ reviewed.
If charged and convicted under the Information Technology Act, Sharma could face up to five years in prison and a fine of 1 million rupees (US$13,000), according to the law. The offenses under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act can carry a prison sentence between two to seven years and a fine between 2,000 rupees (US$26) and 100,000 (US$1,300), according to the law.
CPJ emailed Chhattisgarh Police Director-General Ashok Juneja for comment but did not receive a reply. CPJ’s calls to Sharma’s family members went unanswered.
In Shah’s case, the Shopian judicial magistrate granted him bail on March 6, but Srinagar police again re-arrested Shah in relation to The Kashmir Walla’s reporting on a gun fight between armed forces and alleged militants in May 2020, according to a report by his outlet and Shah’s colleague at The Kashmir Walla, who spoke to CPJ on the condition of anonymity due to fear of retaliation by authorities.
Srinagar police registered an additional first information report against Shah on July 9, 2020, accusing him of violating five sections of the Indian penal code pertaining to rioting, attempted murder, printing or engraving matter known to be defamatory, statements conducing to public mischief, and abetment according to The KashmirWalla.
The first four offenses can carry a prison sentence between two and 10 years and an unspecified fine, according to the law, which says that abetment carries the same punishment as committing an offense itself.
Jammu and Kashmir Police Director-General Dilbag Singh did not respond to CPJ’s request for comment sent via messaging app.
Police initially arrested Shah on February 4 for allegedly publishing “anti-national content,” and began investigating him for sedition and making statements causing public mischief under the Indian penal code and the anti-terror Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, as CPJ documented at the time.
On February 27, Shah was granted bail in that case, but Shopian police re-arrested him in relation to The Kashmir Walla’s reporting on alleged official pressure on a Kashmir school and began investigating him on provocation with intent to cause a riot and publishing statements conducive to public mischief, both crimes under the Indian penal code, as CPJ documented.
In February, 57 publications, press freedom groups, and human rights organizations including CPJ wrote a letter to Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha demanding Shah’s release, along with SajadGul, Aasif Sultan and Manan Gulzar Dar.
Republican-controlled state legislatures have decided to launch an all-out assault on the transgender community, specifically targeting children with their hate-filled bills. This assault is going to get people killed, and it feels like that’s the entire point of what they are doing right now. Ring of Fire’s Farron Cousins talks with Twitch streamer Tiffany Starr […]
New York, March 4, 2022 – Russian authorities should allow all local and international media outlets and social media platforms to operate freely, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Friday.
Russian state media regulator Roskomnadzor on Friday, March 4, blocked access to several news websites, including those of BBC Russian, German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle, Latvia-based independent news site Meduza, the Russian-language service of U.S. Congress-funded broadcaster Voice of America (VOA), and several services of the U.S. Congress-funded broadcaster Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), according to newsreports.
Also Friday, the Russian legislature adopted amendments to the criminal code introducing higher penalties, such as fines, criminal liabilities, and imposing prison terms of up to 15 years for those convicted of disseminating “fakes,” or information that authorities deem to be false, about military operations, or discrediting Russian Armed Forces, according to mediareports. Putin signed the amendments today, according to reports, meaning the bill goes into effect tomorrow.
“Russian authorities have moved quickly to establish total censorship and control over the free flow of information since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24,” said Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator. “The Russian public cannot be deprived of information and news and be forced to rely on the Kremlin-approved interpretation of events at this very important time in Russian history. The censorship must stop, and bans must be lifted.”
Among other developments on Friday:
Liberal radio station Ekho Moskvy closed all its social media accounts down following the station’s closure on Thursday, mediareported.
Independent Russian media outlet Znak and online broadcaster TV 2 in Tomsk city both closed due to an increased number of restrictions from the Russian government, according to mediareports.
Liberal news website The Village announced on its Telegram channel that it has closed its Moscow office and that the editorial staff had started working from Warsaw, Poland’s capital. Two days earlier, on March 2, Roskomnadzor had blocked the publication’s website, according to reports.
Independent news website computing.co.ukreported that the Apple app and Google app stores are blocked in Russia, and Roskomnadzor confirmed in a statement and on their platform that Facebook and Twitter are blocked.
On February 24, Roskomnadzor said in a statement that all media “must only use information and data received from official Russian sources.”
Paris, March 3, 2022 – Russian lawmakers should not pass a draft law that would threaten to imprison journalists for sharing information about the country’s recent invasion of Ukraine, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.
The State Duma, the lower house of Russia’s legislature, is scheduled to consider legislation on Friday that would impose prison terms of up to 15 years for those convicted of disseminating “fakes,” or information that authorities deem to be false, about the actions of Russia’s armed forces, according to news reports.
The Duma could pass the bill during its Friday session, which would then send it to the upper house of parliament; if passed there, it could be enacted by President Vladimir Putin, reports said.
“Proposed Russian legislation that threatens to imprison people for sharing so-called ‘fake’ information about the country’s invasion of Ukraine is an obvious threat to free speech and the independent press,” said Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator, in New York. “The State Duma should withdraw this proposed legislation, and authorities must allow the media to freely cover all events related to the invasion of Ukraine.”
On February 28, the Duma Committee on Security and Anti-Corruption Action’s head, Vasily Piskarev, announced plans for the legislation, saying that “fakes” about the invasion were created in Ukraine and then “willingly spread by a whole range of Russian media,” according to reports.
The proposed legislation, which would amend the country’s criminal code, imposes prison terms of up to three years for the simple fabrication of false information; 10 years for disseminating false information using an official position, the internet, or a group of people; and 15 years for disseminating false information with socially dangerous consequences, according to multiplenewsreports.
Also on Thursday, the independent radio station Echo of Moscow announced its liquidation and the independent broadcaster Dozhd TV declared during a live broadcast that it was temporarily suspending its activities.
The two independent broadcasters’ websites have been inaccessible in Russia since Tuesday, when the prosecutor general’s office ordered the country’s media regulator to block their websites for spreading “deliberately false information about the actions of Russian military personnel,” as CPJ documented at the time.
Dozhd editor-in-chief Tikhon Dzyadko told CPJ in a phone interview that the outlet had suspended operations because “Russian legislators put us in such situation that makes it impossible to continue working as a journalist.”
“Tomorrow, a new bill is set to be adopted about allegedly fake news,” he said. “It will make reporting on Ukraine practically impossible, illegal. It poses a threat to all of us, that’s why we made such [a] decision.”
CPJ emailed the Russian State Duma for comment but did not receive any reply.
On May 6, 2021, Shahana Rashid Sanu, a poet and literary writer, filed a complaint against Salah Uddin Shoaib Choudhury, editor of the tabloid Weekly Blitz, at the Dhaka Cyber Tribunal, pointing to eightarticlespublishedonitswebsite, whichaccused Sanu and her sons of engaging in criminal and anti-government activities, according to a copy of the complaint, which CPJ reviewed, and Choudhury, who spoke to CPJ by phone.
On June 10, 2021, the Dhaka Cyber Tribunal referred the case to the cybercrime unit of the Dhaka police’s Criminal Investigation Department (CID) for investigation, Choudhury told CPJ. On August 16, 2021, CID officers interrogated Choudhury for around two hours, during which they repeatedly asked him why he published the articles and demanded he reveal his sources, he said.
Section 40 of the Digital Security Act allows authorities 60 days to complete an investigation, which can be extended with judicial approval. The CID submitted applications to extend the investigation period on June 22, 2021, September 30, 2021, and November 17, 2021, according to Choudhury.
On January 23, 2022, Sub-inspector Mehdi Hassan filed an investigative report at the Dhaka Cyber Tribunal which accused Choudhury of violating three sections of the Digital Security Act pertaining to the publication of offensive, false, or threatening information; defamation; and abetment.
The first two offenses can each carry a prison sentence of up to three years and a fine between 300,000 taka (US$3,500) and 500,000 taka (US$5,815), according to the law, which states that abetment carries the same punishment as committing an offense itself.
On February 17, 2022, the Dhaka Cyber Tribunal issued a summons for Choudhury to appear on April 6, 2022, at which time the journalist’s lawyer will file an application for anticipatory bail, Choudhury said, adding that if anticipatory bail is denied, the tribunal will frame, or determine the nature of, the charges against him.
Sub-inspector Hassan, the investigating officer in the case, did not respond to CPJ’s text message requesting comment. Sanu did not respond to CPJ’s request for comment sent via messaging app.
Choudhury was previously arrested in November 2003 when he tried to travel to Israel to participate in a conference with the Hebrew Writers Association, according to CPJ documentation. He was released on bail in May 2005 before he was convicted of sedition and treason in January 2015 and sentenced to seven years in prison, according to CPJ research and Choudhury. Choudhury was also detained from November 2012 to July 2018, when he served concurrent sentences for fraud, sedition, and treason, he said.
In July 2006, two small devices detonated outside the Weekly Blitz office, as CPJ documented.
Via America’s Lawyer: U.S. intel investigates the Zero Hedge as a propaganda outlet – simply because its Russian contributors have disavowed war with Ukraine. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: US intelligence agencies are accusing popular news website, Zero Hedge, of spreading […]