MIAMI, Florida (February 24, 2004)—The Inter American Press Association
(IAPA) today welcomed the decision to award the 2004 UNESCO-Guillermo Cano Press
Freedom World Prize to Cuban poet and journalist Raúl Rivero, in prison
for almost a year.
The IAPA had been proposing the award be given to Rivero for the past several
years. In October, the organization, jointly with the World Press Freedom Committee,
nominated Rivero – vice chairman of the IAPA’s Committee on Freedom
of the Press and Information and a member of the Board of Directors –
once again.
Commenting on the award, IAPA President Jack Fuller, president of the Tribune
Publishing Company, Chicago, Illinois said, “We hope that this focuses
more attention on the plight of Rivero and the other imprisoned journalists
in Cuba who should be freed as soon as possible.”
Rafael Molina, chairman of the IAPA’s Committee on Freedom of the Press
and Information, declared that “this recognition is an important show
of support for our work to secure the release of journalists jailed in Cuba.
Today we celebrate this prize and we look forward to the prompt release of Rivero
and his colleagues being held in prison since last year.”
UNESCO – the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
– announced the award today in the following press release:
JAILED CUBAN JOURNALIST RAUL RIVERO
AWARDED WORLD PRESS FREEDOM PRIZE 2004
Paris, February 24 – The jailed Cuban journalist Raúl Rivero Castañeda
was today awarded the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize for 2004
by UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura, on the recommendation of
an international jury.
“The Prize is a tribute to Raúl Rivero’s brave and longstanding
commitment to independent reporting, the hallmark of professional journalism,”
Mr Matsuura said upon endorsing the recommendation to award the prize to Mr
Rivero. “Over the years, Mr Rivero has paid dearly for that commitment
and the Prize celebrates the continuing struggle of media professionals for
freedom of expression, an indispensable component of democracy,” Mr Matsuura
added. “I am deeply concerned about the conditions in which Mr Rivero,
who is reported to be ill, is being held and I call on the authorities to free
Mr Rivero and the other journalists.”
The jury was chaired by Jamaica’s Oliver Clarke, Chairman of Gleaner
Company Limited, who declared: “I hope that the international attention
the Prize generates, will encourage the Cuban authorities to respect individuals’
basic human right to express their views freely.”
Born in 1945, Mr Rivero is a prominent journalist and poet. He endured sustained
government harassment since leaving the state controlled press in 1988. From
that time and until his arrest in March last year, the authorities interrogated
and detained him on several occasions and restricted his freedom of movement.
After studying at the Havana Faculty of Journalism, Mr Rivero served as correspondent
for the Prensa Latina state news agency in Moscow from 1973 to 1976. He then
returned to Cuba and headed the science and culture service of the news agency.
In 1989, he resigned from the National Union of Cuban Writers and Artists and,
in 1995, he founded the Cuba Press independent news agency. In 2001, he was
among the founders of the first independent association of journalists in Cuba.
Rivero Conducted training workshops for Cuban journalists and contributed to
the publication of the magazine De Cuba.
Mr Rivero was given a 20-year prison sentence in April 2003 and the 25 other
journalists arrested alongside him were handed jail terms of 14 to 27 years.
They were tried under Article 91 of the Penal code, which imposes lengthy prison
sentences or death for undermining “the independence or territorial integrity
of the State.” The journalists’ arrest last March was part of a
crackdown in which, beside the journalists, more than 50 dissidents were jailed.
Reportedly detained in the prison of Canaletas in Ciego de Ávila, 460
kilometres east of Havana, Mr Rivero is said to be suffering from circulatory
problems. His wife, Blanca Reyes, has expressed serious worry about his health
and has described the conditions of his detention as “harsh.” Ms
Reyes says she is only allowed to visit her husband every three months.
The $25,000 UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize is awarded each
year on the occasion of World Press Freedom Day, May 3, which will be celebrated
this year in Belgrade (Serbia and Montenegro) and Mr Clarke said he hoped that
Mr Rivero will be allowed to attend the prize giving ceremony in Belgrade.
The Prize is awarded by the Director-General of UNESCO on the recommendation
of an independent jury of media professionals from all over the world. The Jury,
which is chaired by Mr Clarke, includes the following members: Kavi Chongkittavorn,
Managing Editor of The Nation (Thailand); Souleymane Diallo, Director of Lynx
and La Lance (Guinea); Kunda Dixit, Editor and Publisher of the Nepali Times
(Nepal); Yosri Fouda, Deputy Director of Al Jazeera Satellite Channel Ltd; Valérie
Gatabazi, President of the Association Rwandaise des Femmes Journalistes (Rwanda);
Maria Carmen Gurruchaga Basurto, Director of Primer Café of Antena 3
Television (Spain); Marvin Kalb, Senior Fellow, Shorenstein Center and Faculty
Chair, Kennedy School of Government (USA); Guadalupe Mantilla de Acquaviva,
Executive President/Director of the Diario el Comercio (Ecuador); journalist
Mohamed Larbi Messari (Morocco); Arturas Racas, Editor in Chief, Business Desk,
Baltic News Service (Lithuania); Veton Surroi, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief
of Koha Ditore (Kosovo); two representatives of the Fundación Guillermo
Cano (Colombia).
The prize, created by UNESCO’s Executive Board in 1997, aims to honour
the work of an individual, organization or institution defending or promoting
freedom of expression anywhere in the world, especially if this puts the person’s
life at risk.
It is named after Colombian journalist Guillermo Cano, who was murdered in
1987 for having denounced the activities of his country’s powerful drug
barons. Candidates are put forward by Member States, regional and international
organizations that promote freedom of expression.
The previous laureates of the World Press Freedom Prize are: Amira Hass (Israel)
2003; Geoffrey Nyarota (Zimbabwe), 2002; imprisoned journalist U Win Tin (Myanmar),
2001; Nizar Nayyouf (Syria), 2000; Jesus Blancornelas (Mexico), 1999; Christina
Anyanwu (Nigeria), 1998; and Gao Yu (China), 1997.
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