http://www.nhpr.org/node/24797
By Abby Goldstein on Monday, May 11, 2009.
Let’s take a stroll through a Burmese Internet café. Rows of tech-savvy young people chat away online, send Facebook messages, and surf the Internet.
But they aren’t free to read and write anything they like. Internet café owners are required to take regular screen shots and turn them over to Burma’s military-run government. Anyone who dares to browse, and much less blog on one of Burma’s “illegal” websites could face decades of jail time. In 2007 the Burmese government shut down the Internet altogether.
But Burma is not alone in its Internet crackdown. More than 20 Chinese bloggers are now in prison, and Iran is considering legislation that would make blogging about corruption or prostitution a crime punishable by death.
The Committee to Protect Journalists recently released its list of the ten worst countries in which to blog. Nations in Asia and the Middle East are at the top of the list. Joel Simon is the executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, and joins us on the line from New York.
The Committee to Protect Journalists: 10 Worst Countries to be a Blogger
(Photo by Marc oh! via Flickr/Creative Commons)
Where there's political will, there is a way
政治的な意思がある一方、方法がある
စစ္မွန္တဲ့ခိုင္မာတဲ့နိုင္ငံေရးခံယူခ်က္ရိွရင္ႀကိဳးစားမႈရိွရင္ နိုင္ငံေရးအေျဖ
ထြက္ရပ္လမ္းဟာေသခ်ာေပါက္ရိွတယ္
Burmese Translation-Phone Hlaing-fwubc
စစ္မွန္တဲ့ခိုင္မာတဲ့နိုင္ငံေရးခံယူခ်က္ရိွရင္ႀကိဳးစားမႈရိွရင္ နိုင္ငံေရးအေျဖ
ထြက္ရပ္လမ္းဟာေသခ်ာေပါက္ရိွတယ္
Burmese Translation-Phone Hlaing-fwubc
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Worst Countries to Blog
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