CANADA
Freedom
of the press has been affected by Executive decrees and judicial orders. The
Ontario Court of Appeal is soon to consider whether a libel suit can be brought
in Canada against The Washington Post in the case of Bangoura v. The Washington
Post because the alleged defamatory article appeared on the internet. Press
freedom advocates are deeply concerned due to the implications it may have on
creating rules that will allow plaintiffs to sue in other countries for defamatory
matter published on the Internet without any substantial connection to the forum
other than mere presence of the plaintiff and a web site.
Recently,
a journalist for a Punjabi-Canadian newspaper was investigating allegations
that a clinic made claims that it could not fulfill. The owner of the clinic
reported to police that the journalist uttered death threats against her. The
journalist asserts that the police were not interested in his denials or even
his proof that he could not have uttered the second death threat, as alleged.
The journalist was charged but the charges were later dropped by the prosecution
because there was no reasonable prospect of conviction. The newspaper has suffered
advertising support due to the charges and the journalist feels unable to pursue
investigative journalism even if in the interest of the community.
In July,
the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), -broadcast
regulators -recently approved requests to distribute the Arabic-language news
network Al-Jazeera on cable and satellite TV. But this was not well taken due
to the strict content rules laid by CRTC to keep anti-Semitic or other abusive
comments off the air, which could mean editing or deleting material.
Michael
Hennessy, president of the Canadian Cable Television Association, said the effect
of the CRTC decision will turn cable companies into censors. The ruling was
also criticized by Jewish groups that claim the network disseminates anti-Semitic
content, the Toronto Star reported.
Federal
regulators' revocation in July of the license of a Quebec radio station for
allegedly broadcasting offensive content has drawn criticism from free-speech
advocates concerned about the ruling's impact on the news media, the Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) did not renew the
license of CHOI-FM, Quebec City's most popular radio station. CRTC said the
station had aired material on a talk show that violated the Broadcasting Act,
CNews reported. It was the first time in history that the CRTC refused to renew
a license because of a station's content, according to CNews and the Globe and
Mail.
The Canadian
Association of Journalists (CAJ) in May gave the national health agency its
annual "Code of Silence Award" for its efforts to conceal open government,
the Globe and Mail reported. For five years, the agency, Health Canada, failed
to provide access to a user-friendly database of potentially harmful prescription
drugs, and refused to release information on adverse drug reactions in a format
that would allow researchers to spot trends and identify problem drugs.
It was reported
by the Globe and Mail in May that the Winnipeg Free Press newspaper was fighting
an attempt by prosecutors to use anti-terrorism legislation to withhold information
from a criminal case involving the Hells Angels motorcycle gang. For the first
time in a criminal case, prosecutors are attempting to use an amendment to the
Canada Evidence Act that lawmakers passed in 2001 to allow private legal hearings.
The amendment's original purpose was to help guard Canada from terrorist activity.
The prosecutors
have requested a private hearing to discuss why certain information in the case
should not be seen by anyone -- including the defendants, their attorneys, and
the media. The Free Press is seeking access to the hearing and the information,
and its lawyer said that the amendment "imposes mandatory secrecy on matters
which could be of immense public interest."
According
to an analysis carried out in late March by New Winnipeg magazine, government
and industry proposals to allow more foreign ownership of the cable media would
limit the voice of Canadian citizens.
Lifting restrictions on foreign ownership would only benefit Canada's four major
cable companies, who would then be able to sell their companies to U.S. corporations,
the article claims. Groups like the Friends of Canadian Broadcasting fear that
Canadians would lose control of their primary means of communication if the
government approves such plans, CNews reported.
The Canadian
Association of Journalists and other international press associations condemned
the apparent murder of French-born Canadian journalist Guy-André Kieffer
in Ivory Coast urging in May the Canadian government to push Ivorian authorities
to ensure his killers be brought to justice.
Mr. Kieffer,
54, has not been seen since he disappeared on April 16 in the capital, Abidjan.
Mr. Kieffer reported regularly on corruption in the important cocoa trade. He
had been accused by some government supporters of being pro-rebel, referring
to the split in this West African nation between a rebel-held north and government-run
south, despite a formal end to a civil war last summer.
Ivorian
media outlets report that Mr. Kieffer was kidnapped and killed by government-allied
militia members. Reporters Without Borders alleges that Mr. Kieffer was twice
threatened by people with government ties prior to his disappearance.