CPJ gala honors five journalists and sets fundraising record Malaysia PM urges fair pay for journalists amid low wages Kashmir Times raid draws concern over media pressure Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions Samoa PM bars Samoa Observer in escalating media dispute Asia sees rising press freedom risks amid China-style controls Thai indictment of journalist sparks cross-border press freedom concerns Thai court indicts Australian journalist over defamation New study shows alarming decline in press freedom in Pakistan Shahzeb Khanzada faces lawsuit threat in Canada over video CPJ gala honors five journalists and sets fundraising record Malaysia PM urges fair pay for journalists amid low wages Kashmir Times raid draws concern over media pressure Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions Samoa PM bars Samoa Observer in escalating media dispute Asia sees rising press freedom risks amid China-style controls Thai indictment of journalist sparks cross-border press freedom concerns Thai court indicts Australian journalist over defamation New study shows alarming decline in press freedom in Pakistan Shahzeb Khanzada faces lawsuit threat in Canada over video
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BBC crew detained, expelled from North Korea

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 9 years ago

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BBC crew detained, expelled from North Korea

NEW YORK - The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has condemned the detention and subsequent expulsion of a BBC crew visiting North Korea.

In a statement, CPJ said that authorities on Friday detained the BBC's Tokyo-based correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, producer Maria Byrne, and cameraman Matthew Goddard in Pyonyang, as they were about to leave the country.  They held and questioned Wingfield-Hayes for eight hours, made him sign a statement, and on Monday put the three on a flight to Beijing, the BBC reported. The team was following a group of Nobel-Prize laureates on a research trip to the country.

"North Korea cannot allow journalists into the country and then obstruct and harass them when they do their jobs," CPJ Asia Program Senior Research Associate Sumit Galhotra said. "Pyongyang has sent a clear signal that it remains deeply hostile to journalists."

North Korea ranked second on CPJ's 2015 list of 10 most-censored countries, which is based on research into the use of tactics ranging from imprisonment and repressive laws to harassment of journalists and restrictions on the Internet. While the country has allowed a handful of news organizations to operate in the country, it maintains heavy restrictions on reporting. - CPJ
 
 

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