« Home | ElectronicsWeekly.com: Europe's €200bn recovery pl... » | Space Daily: Europe earmarks nearly 10 billion eur... » | OilVoice: Denmark - DONG Energy to Build New Windm... » | Latin Business Chronicle: The New Latin America pr... » | BBC NEWS: Venezuela welcomes Russian navy ships » | timesofmalta.com - Malta wants cruise passengers t... » | IC Publications: Turkey, Cyprus tensions rise over... » | Xinhua: Greece - Hu Jintao's visit highlights frie... » | EU-Digest: Italy to veto new EU climate targets if... » | Guardian.co.uk: Spain to present 2-yr plan to boos... » 

Nov 26, 2008 

Guardian.co.uk: Legal fight to overturn Israel's Gaza media ban - by Roy Greenslade

For the complete report from the guardian.co.uk click on this link

Legal fight to overturn Israel's Gaza media ban - by Roy Greenslade

Rory McCarthy wrote last week about Israel's ban on journalists entering the Gaza Strip. He reported that international media companies had sent a letter of protest to Israel's prime minister. Two days ago the Foreign Press Association (FPA) took the matter a step further by appealing to Israel's supreme court to overturn the government's ban. The court petition, which names Gaza's military commander, the defense minister and the interior minister, claims the ban constitutes "a grave and mortal blow against freedom of the press and other basic rights and gives the unpleasant feeling that the state of Israel has something to hide." The Tel Aviv-based FPA represents foreign correspondents working in Israel and the Palestinian territories, and has about 460 members from 32 countries, representing print, TV and radio. "We believe the Israeli government has an obligation to keep the Gaza border open to international journalists," says Steven Gutkin, the FPA's chairman and Jerusalem bureau chief of Associated Press. "The foreign media serve as the world's window into Gaza and it's essential that we be allowed in." Israel's defence ministry says foreign journalists will not be allowed in until Gaza militants stop shooting. But a ministry spokesman, Shlomo Dror, suggested Israel was not happy with press coverage from Gaza. "Where Gaza is concerned, our image will always be bad," he said. "When journalists go in it works against us, and when they don't go in it works against us."

Note EU-Digest: Journalists can be wrong sometimes, but they can not be wrong all the time.

Labels: , , ,

|

About us

EU-Digest, a free service of Europe House, provides news highlights and links to European related news reports on economic, social and political issues. Europe House reserves the right to deny any comments or articles it finds irrelevant. The information published in EU-Digest does not necessarily reflect the viewpoint or the opinion of Europe House.

Subscribe

To subscribe enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

Tell a friend


Eurobarometer

European Weather - Amsterdam

Click for Amsterdam, Netherlands Forecast

For information on placing your advertising link click here.

Official PayPal Seal

Search

Google



Archives

Powered by Blogger
and Blogger Templates



Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to GoogleAdd to My AOL
Subscribe in BloglinesSubscribe in FeedLounge
Add EU-Digest to Newsburst from CNET News.com
BLOGGER


Get Firefox!