Maynard Institute archives

Saberi Denies She Had Confidential Document

Roxana Saberi tells National Public Radio she made a false confession to her Iranian interrogators that she was a U.S. spy.¬† ‘I thought I had to fabricate it to save myself,’ she said. (Credit: John Poole/NPR)

Freed Journalist Contradicts Her Iranian Lawyer

Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi Thursday denied her lawyer’s claim that she had acquired a confidential government report on the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the basis for Iran’s case against the freelance journalist.

In an interview with National Public Radio’s Melissa Block, Saberi also said she initially confessed to being a spy but later recanted, and that during her imprisonment:

"I was under severe psychological and mental pressure, although I was not physically tortured. The first few days, I was interrogated for several hours, from morning until evening, blindfolded, facing a wall, by up to four men, and threatened . . . that I would be put in prison for 10 to 20 years or more or even face execution. And I was in solitary confinement for several days. The really difficult thing was, they didn’t let me tell anyone where I was."

On May 11, an appeals court cut Saberi’s eight-year jail sentence for spying to a two-year suspended term and the U.S-born journalist walked free after more than three months in Tehran’s Evin prison. Two days later, one of her defense lawyers, Saleh Nikbakht, spoke with reporters in Tehran.

In Thursday’s interview, Block asked, "Roxana, there’s been a lot of confusion – maybe some misinformation – about what evidence was used against you, and maybe we can try to clear some of that up. One of your defense attorneys, Saleh Nikbakht, said after your release that part of the evidence against you was that you had a document about the U.S. invasion of Iraq that you had copied while you were working as a translator for a powerful council within Iran’s clerical government. How did you get this document? What was that about?

"Well, I have to clarify a number of things that you just said," Saberi replied. "The Iranian government claimed that I had a classified document, but I don’t think it was classified. This is Iran and it’s not a very transparent system, and some things that authorities say are not always true. The document did not have a classified stamp on it, which I’ve heard such documents are supposed to have, and it was not clearly identifiable as classified. It was an old document from 2002 and it didn’t contain any information that had not been stated publicly several times before. They also didn’t even know about it at the time of my arrest. They didn’t know about it until I brought it to their attention."

Block said, "You brought it to their attention?"

"Yes, because they pressured me to confess that I had classified documents and I didn’t have any, but I started describing the documents that I did have. And so, later, they brought me to my home and I gave them the ones that they didn’t already have. But when I gave them this one, I looked at it and I said, ‘See, there’s no classified stamp on it; it’s not classified.’

"Why did you have this document in the first place? How did you come to have that in your house?"

"I obtained it at a governmental think tank."

"So where is that coming from?

"I have to say, first of all, that – about this document – in court, both my attorneys argued that it was not classified. So I can’t assess why Mr. Nikbakht is saying now that it is. A lot of the things he has said since my release have been either incomplete or untrue, and I don’t know why it is – maybe they believe whatever the court has told them or maybe it’s because they live and work in Iran and they have to be careful of their relations with the authorities. In Iran, there have been, even, attorneys who have been jailed for representing clients with sensitive cases, such as mine."

The interview with Saberi, her first in depth since her release, is airing Thursday on NPR’s "All Things Considered."


Jerry Bembry, left, with veteran sportscaster Charlie Neal. 

Magazine’s Jerry Bembry Among 100 Cut at ESPN

ESPN began making a round of previously announced job cuts Wednesday, informing about 100 employees that they would be laid off this week. Among the first was Jerry Bembry, senior writer at ESPN: The Magazine and a black journalist.

The Bristol, Conn.-based sports news network said in February that it would eliminate 200 vacant and occupied positions worldwide after a 60-to 90-day review, as Eric Gershon reported in the Hartford (Conn.) Courant.

"ESPN Chief Executive George Bodenheimer told employees then that the weak economy and its effect on ‘major advertisers’ compelled the action, unprecedented in ESPN’s 30-year history.

"The positions being eliminated this week represent many departments, including television production and back-office jobs, ESPN spokesman Mike Soltys said."

[Asked how many journalists or journalists of color were affected, ESPN spokesman Josh Krulewitz told Journal-isms on Friday that he did not have specifics on positions.] 

Bembry, 46, had been with ESPN for nine years. He began work at the magazine in 1999 as an editor, and over the years has worked in television, online and in radio. He was one of the lead writers for the NBA playoffs on ESPN.com when the site stepped up its post-season coverage in 2001; worked as an analyst on ESPNEWS and ESPN Radio; contributed stories that appeared on ESPN’s "SportsCenter" and "Outside the Lines," and worked as a color analyst for ESPNU, the network’s college sports station. Named senior writer in 2004, Bembry was the first African American to hold that position at the magazine.

Bembry told Journal-isms his relationship with the magazine had soured over the years. The magazine chose not to run his online feature on ESPN analyst Jalen Rose and his father, former NBA All-Star Jimmy Walker, which won the best feature award from the Professional Basketball Writers Association, and Best Sports New Media story from the New York Association of Black Journalists.

"The NBA editor turned it down, and the executive editor said ‘It’s not something I would have published,’" Bembry said.

"I always try to write stories that are different, and stories that resonate with readers. The reader response I got from that story was tremendous."

According to Bembry, the story caught the eye of a book agent, who hired Bembry to write the memoir of Bill White, the former baseball star, broadcaster and National League President. The book is due to be published next year.

Bembry said other than writing the book, he’s not sure what his next move will be.

Bembry spent 15 years with the Baltimore Sun, in news and then sports. He took a year off from writing from 2006 to 2007 to produce video for ESPN: The Magazine cover shoots and other stories. 

”In this climate, print reporters have to become more versatile to survive, and I’m grateful that ESPN gave me a chance to hone those skills,’ Bembry said. ‘Now I’m eager to put them to use, both in and outside of sports.”

Sotomayor’s Mixed First Amendment Record

May 27, 2009

"Yes" on Right of Access, Mostly "No" to FOIA Requests

Pride in a product of the South Bronx . . .An analysis of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor’s judicial opinions on First Amendment issues concludes that while Sotomayor has an abundance of judicial experience, "it is surprising to see that no clear standard on First Amendment issues has emerged from her many cases.

"However, this is primarily due to the small number of such cases that she has heard," the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press said Wednesday night.

"When confronted with the question of public and press access to the judicial system, she has favored the right of access. But her Freedom of Information Act cases tend to favor withholding records from requesters.

"However, she did have one notable order releasing the suicide note of former deputy White House counsel Vince Foster."

The report also notes that, "As a District Court judge, Sotomayor wrote the opinion in Tasini v. New York Times, a case that was eventually overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court.

"In 1993, a group of six freelance authors sued the New York Times Company, Newsday, Inc., and Time, Inc., claiming that the print publishers had infringed upon the writers‚Äô copyrights when the publishers licensed rights to copy and sell articles to computerized databases such as Lexis/Nexis. The media companies argued that they were authorized to reproduce the articles as a ‘collective work’ under the federal Copyright Act.

"Sotomayor sided with the media companies in holding that the writers did not have a copyright interest in the articles.

"Instead, Sotomayor held that electronic versions are ‘revisions’ of the original articles which are covered by the publishers‚Äô copyright interest in the collective work of the periodicals.

"The case was one of the first applying the collective work provision of the Copyright Act to modern electronic technology, Sotomayor noted. In the 24-page opinion, Sotomayor analyzed in detail the text and intent of the Copyright Act.

. . . and in Puerto Rico, the nominee's ancestral home.". . . The case was appealed to the Second Circuit, which overturned the decision, and held that the reproduced articles were new works, and not revisions included in a collective work. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Second Circuit 7–2, ruling that the authors had copyright interests in the electronic editions of their works."

Earlier, "The White House put a handful of legal scholars on the phone with reporters Wednesday to talk about the president’s pick," John Eggerton reported for Broadcasting & Cable.

"Paul M. Smith, a partner at Jenner & Block and a former classmate of Sotomayor’s who has argued Free Speech cases before the high court, said that when it came to Free Speech issues, she ‘does not come into cases with a broad, doctrinal bias, but instead takes each case as it comes and looks very closely at the details and the facts to decide which way the constitutional analysis ought to go.’

"He cited two speech cases she decided. One, he said, involved a police officer who was fired from his job for engaging in private bigoted and offensive speech, off hours, to private parties anonymously. Two of the three judges voted to affirm the dismissal of his First Amendment claim, finding it was ‘perfectly constitutional’ to fire him for that private speech. Judge Sotomayor dissented, he said." ‘She said: ‘not so fast. It is a pretty radical idea to fire a public employee for private, off-hours expression. I think we should let this case go to trial.’"

Sotomayor’s nomination was international news.

"Unsurprisingly, today’s reports mostly celebrate the historic nature of the nomination, with Sotomayor’s life story taking overwhelming precedence," Jane Kim wrote on Tuesday for Columbia Journalism Review.

"The Los Angeles Times headlines its story, ‘Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor rose from humble roots.’ The New York Times opens with those roots as well, writing that Obama chose ‘a daughter of Puerto Rican parents raised in a Bronx public housing project to become the nation‚Äôs first Hispanic justice.’ Similarly, in its lede, USA Today states that her confirmation would give the court ‘for the first time in nearly two decades, the experience of an individual from a truly humble background.’"

. . . Geraldo Got "Goosebumps" With the Nomination

Geraldo Rivera"When Geraldo Rivera heard today that Sonia Sotomayor was the Supreme Court nominee, he saw the light," Gail Shister reported Tuesday on the TV Newser Web site.

"Literally.

"The Fox News host was so excited about the high court’s first Hispanic nominee that he leapt from his chair in his home office and bopped his head on a low-hanging light fixture.

"’This is as important to us as Obama was to the African American community. I have goosebumps,’ says Rivera, 65, born to a Catholic, Puerto Rican father and Jewish mother. He defines himself as the former.

"In an interview from his North Jersey home, Rivera says there’s only been a few times in his life he felt this pumped: When the Mets won their first World Series; when he passed his bar exam and when his kids were born. (He has five, ages 3 to 29.)

"’It finally happened. Wow. Look how the Puerto Rican community came up with someone so world-class,’ says Rivera of Sotomayor, 54, a federal Appeals Court judge in New York and the product of a South Bronx housing project.

"The nomination of [Sotomayor] will help dispel, in Rivera’s view, ‘the whole poverty-pimp mentality that afflicts the Puerto Rican community in New York. Elected officials go around blaming "the man."’

Fellow student Lisa Jack shot a roll of film of Barack Obama as an Occidental College freshman. (credit: Lisa Jack/Contour by Getty Images)

NBC to Air "Inside the Obama White House" Special

"Brian Williams anchors an NBC News special "Inside the Obama White House" which will air in one-hour installments next Tuesday and Wednesday night at 9pmET/PT," Steve Krakauer wrote for the TV Newser Web site.

"More than a dozen crews and cameras will be placed throughout the White House this Friday. And Williams will interview Pres. Obama next Tuesday, the day before the president leaves for a trip to the Middle East and Europe.

"This is the seventh installment over the last 40 years of this NBC News series."

Meanwhile, Lisa Jack, a student with Obama at Occidental College when the future president was a freshman, is exhibiting 21 of the 36 photos on a roll of film she took then, plus a blow-up of her original contact sheet, in "Barack Obama: The Freshman," an exhibition opening Thursday at M+B Gallery in West Hollywood, Calif., according to Mike Boehm, writing Wednesday in the Los Angeles Times.

Nine were first published in Time magazine’s December "Person of the Year" spread on Obama.

"Jack rummaged for the long-ignored negatives in her Minneapolis basement early in 2008, after it became clear Obama was a serious contender for the presidency. The callow kid kicking back on a couch in a living room near L.A.’s Occidental College, where he and Jack were students, may not have been the image the Obama campaign wanted to project."

Relations Between Pacifica, N.Y. Station in Turmoil

Pacifica Radio, which moved in April to "secure our broadcast signals" at its five politically and culturally "progressive" stations around the country, has replaced the leadership of WBAI-FM in New York.

"So far in the last few weeks the National Board has removed the station manager and the Program Director at WBAI, forced out the Program Director at KPFK and the News Director of Informativo, fired the Chief Financial Officer of the foundation. They are also secretly considering the removal of the station managers at KPFA and WPFW," Bernard White, ousted as WBAI program director, charged on the Web site of a group called Take Back WBAI Radio.

KPFK is in Los Angeles and WPFW is in Washington. Informativo Pacifica describes itself as "A half-hour national and international news program in Spanish, with reports from contributors in more than 30 countries of the Americas and Europe." Grace Aaron, interim executive director of Pacifica, could not be reached for comment on White’s assertion.

Both sides in the WBAI dispute agree that the station is in dire financial straits, but they disagree about who is to blame. Disputes between the feisty, listener-supported Pacifica stations and their national leadership are nothing new, and have led to "takeovers" by one side or the other.

A story by John Tarleton in the New York-based Indypendent, which describes itself as a labor of love by citizen journalists, begins, "When WBAI-99.5 FM’s new acting General Manager Lavarn Williams visited the tally room during the first week of the station’s May fund drive, she was surprised to find pledge cards that had not been handed over to the fund drive supervisor four hours after the pledges had originally been received from the left-leaning radio station’s listeners.

"For Williams, keeping better track of pledge cards is only one part of a much larger push to transform a venerable, left-wing radio station that faces a slew of problems including more than a million dollars in debts, declining audience and membership, the threat of eviction from its downtown office and a backlogged premiums fulfillment process that has angered many of the station’s supporters.

". . . Williams’ arrival is being cheered by those who believe the station has been mismanaged but others warn that the station’s longstanding commitment to racial inclusion is at risk, noting that WBAI’s General Manager Tony Riddle and Program Director Bernard White, both of whom are African-American, have already been removed from their posts." Williams is African American as well.

Asian Journalists to Honor Eng, Lee, Park, Paulus

Clockwise, from top, left, Dinah Eng, Steve Paulus, Corky Lee and Jeannie Park are to be honored Aug. 16 in Boston.Dinah Eng, columnist for Scripps Howard News Service; Corky Lee, freelance photojournalist; Jeannie Park, former editor, Time Inc.; and Steve Paulus, senior vice president/general manager of NY1 News, are recipients of four of the Asian American Journalists Association’s top awards for 2009, the group announced on Friday.

The association said, "Eng’s founding of The Executive Leadership Program has developed 381 Asian American and Pacific Islander newsroom leaders who have propelled AAJA to national prominence. She has worked tirelessly to promote diversity by training, mentoring and encouraging promotions of journalists to reach their highest potential. Her influence with media executives has made it possible for the program to exist year after year.

"For over 35 years, Corky Lee has used his camera to ensure that the faces of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and their experiences be included in American history.

"Jeannie Park brings both wisdom and grace to everything she does, while increasing the diversity among the staffs of every publication she’s headed from InStyle to People magazine. She has mentored and advised countless young members of AAJA, who aspire to executive offices.

"Steve Paulus has been instrumental in hiring at least 35 Asian American and Pacific Islanders over 20 years at NY1 News and WCBS-TV. He has also hired dozens more at Time Warner’s upstate New York channels."

6 Blacks on List of Magazine’s "Top" 50 D.C. Journalists

Four years ago, Washingtonian magazine was panned by journalists of color when its list of the "50 Best and Most Influential Journalists" in the capital included only two people of color — both columnists.

The list’s compiler, Garrett M. Graff, was then a 24-year-old who had arrived in D.C. only two years earlier after graduating from Harvard.

This year’s "Top Journalists" list, Graff’s first since 2005 and first as executive editor of the magazine, includes six black journalists, though still no Latinos, Asian Americans or Native Americans.

The six: Gwen Ifill of PBS, Michele Norris of National Public Radio, Washington Post columnists Eugene Robinson, Michael Wilbon and Colbert I. King, and Helene Cooper, a New York Times White House correspondent. Robinson and Wilbon were on the 2005 list.

Separately, Dean Baquet, New York Times Washington Bureau chief, is listed among the "movers and shakers behind the scenes"; public radio host Kojo Nnamdi of WAMU-FM is one of 12 "anchors strong and steady," and the "rising stars" include Jonathan Capehart, Washington Post editorial writer, and Hawaii-raised Yunji De Nies, an ABC News White House correspondent.

Graff’s list, which appears in the June issue, which was "compiled based on interviews with dozens of the Washington journal-ism establishment, is biased toward reporters who will shape our views of the Obama era," he wrote.

They are not ranked by "influence," though Graff does call columnist Thomas L. Friedman of the New York Times "arguably Washington‚Äôs most powerful journalist. . . . Tom Friedman‚Äôs books have done more to shape the way business thinks about globalization ‚Äî and more recently, ‘green’ technology ‚Äî than just about anything said by any corporate leader."

A report last year for Unity: Journalists of Color on the number of full-time reporters, correspondents, columnists, bureau chiefs and editors who cover Washington for U.S. daily newspapers found that while there were three journalists of color heading major news operations in the nation’s capital in 2004, there was just one in 2008: Baquet.

In addition, the 2008 study showed that only 15 of 122 editors — including desk editors, bureau chiefs and online producers — were journalists of color, just over 12 percent.

Hearing Urged on Radio Performance Royalties

"Broadcasters and civil rights leaders have sent a joint letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT) asking him to set a public hearing on the potential consequences of the Performance Rights Act for minority- and female-owned radio broadcasters." Radio Ink reported on Tuesday.

"Leahy is a sponsor of the Performance Rights Act, the House version of which has already been approved by the House Judiciary Committee, which is chaired by PRA sponsor John Conyers (D-MI). Conyers went ahead with a committee vote on the bill despite requests for a hearing from civil rights groups and minority broadcasters.

The letter is signed by Bustos Media President/CEO Amador Bustos, Spanish Broadcasting System Chief Revenue Officer Frank Flores, Spanish Radio Association Director Frank Montero, Minority Media and Telecommunications Council Exec. Director David Honig, American Women in Radio and Television President Maria Brennan, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law Exec. Director Barbara Arnwine, and Rainbow/PUSH Coalition founder/President Rev. Jesse Jackson.

What About Journalists Held by the United States?

Ibrahim Jassam"If Iran Freed [Roxana] Saberi, Why Won’t the US Release Journalist Ibrahim Jassam?" Jeremy Scahill, author and journalist often heard on Pacifica Radio’s "Democracy Now!" writes on his Rebel Reports blog.

"It is already a de facto US policy to target journalists. The US has consistently attacked journalists and media organizations in modern wars. In the 1999 US-led NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, General Wesley Clark, then the Supreme Allied Commander of NATO, ordered an airstrike on Radio Television Serbia, killing 16 media workers, including make-up artists and technical staff, an action Amnesty International labeled a ‘war crime.’ Richard Holbrooke, who is currently Obama‚Äôs point man on Afghanistan and Pakistan, praised that bombing at the time.

"The Obama administration has recently paid a lot of lip service to freedom of the press, particularly around the case of Iranian-American journalist [Roxana] Saberi, who was released May 11 from an Iranian prison. Yet, the US military continues to hold journalists as prisoners without charges or rights in neighboring Iraq. Ibrahim Jassam, a cameraman and photographer for Reuters has been a US prisoner in Iraq since last September despite an Iraqi court’s order last year that he be freed."

Trahant Among 9 Awarded Kaiser Fellowships in Health

Mark N. TrahantPaula Andalo, managing editor of El Tiempo Latino in Washington; Sindya N. Bhanoo, San Francisco-based freelance contributor to the Washington Post Health section; Monique Fields, metro reporter at the Birmingham (Ala.) News; Mark N. Trahant, freelance journalist, Maynard Institute board chairman and former editorial page editor of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which folded its print edition in March; and Anita Wadhwani, freelance journalist in Nashville, Tenn., are among nine journalists awarded a Kaiser Media Fellowship in Health, the program announced on Wednesday.

The fellows "engage in group site visits focused on health policy issues and attend special briefings with leading health policy experts and practitioners to increase their understanding of current health policy issues, while working on in-depth reporting projects on a variety of policy-related topics. The Fellows will also receive training in multimedia reporting techniques," a news release said.

Andalo is to study the role community clinics play in providing care for Hispanic immigrants; Bhanoo, balancing the benefits of electronic medical records with privacy concerns; Fields, the Mental Health Parity Act and its impact on mental health care in Alabama; Trahant, the Indian Health Service and its relevance to the national health reform debate; and Wadhwani, cuts to the TennCare program and the impact on patients.

"The fellowship projects can take as long as nine months or as little as a few months to complete, but all fellows participate in site visits and seminars throughout the year. Stipends are awarded based on the length of the fellowship, up to $55,000 for a nine-month period. The program also covers expenses, such as travel and computer equipment, based on the needs of the project," the announcement said.

Andalo is from Argentina; Trahant is a member of the Shoshone-Bannock tribes; Fields is African American and Bhanoo and Wadhwani are South Asian, executive director Penny Duckham said.

Short Takes

  • "The Chicago Public Library on Wednesday announced the acquisition of a trove of historical documents from the family that launched the Chicago Defender. The archive is described as the largest and most significant collection from the U.S. black press ever donated to a library," Editor & Publisher reported on Wednesday. "The Abbott-Sengstacke Family Papers are a rare archive that languished in 83 boxes Robert Sengstacke inherited from his father John H. Sengstacke, who ran the paper from 1948 until his death in 1997."
  • Marilyn Milloy, features editor of AARP The Magazine since January 2007, has been promoted to deputy editor, managing the magazine‚Äôs feature editorial staff, and overseeing story lineup and content development, AARP announced on Tuesday. "She will also work to expand the magazine‚Äôs online presence and develop innovative, multiplatform content." Milloy "most recently conceived and developed the print and online package that led to AARP The Magazine‚Äôs first ever National Magazine Award: ‘1968: The Year that Rocked our World.’ Milloy‚Äôs three decades of distinguished journalism include 13 years as a national correspondent and Southern Bureau Chief for New York‚Äôs Newsday, plus a successful stint as Editor-in-Chief of NEA Today, the magazine published by the National Education Association."
  • "After more than a year on hiatus, the founder of East West, a bi-monthly magazine targeting Asian Americans and focused on the intersection of Eastern and Western cultures, has announced plans to relaunch it," Jason Fell reported Tuesday for Folio magazine. "The magazine‚Äôs Web site will go live June 8 and the print edition will debut in September."
  • "There was no big struggle, no upward battle to launch Hawai’i’s first television newscast entirely in the Hawaiian language," Lee Cataluna wrote in the Honolulu Advertiser. The organization Aha Punana Leo, which has as its mission spreading the Hawaiian language, is producing the show in partnership with Paliku Documentary Films and KGMB9 TV.
  • "Former CNN anchor Veronica De La Cruz’s mission to save her brother’s life has picked up tremendous steam," Steve Krakauer wrote Wednesday for MediaBistro. ‘De La Cruz’s brother, Eric, is fighting for his life while awaiting a heart transplant. As she began asking for donations through her Twitter account and Website the response began to grow. Celebrities from Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails to Tony Hawk have picked up the cause, as have thousands others now on Twitter and elsewhere."
  • "The coverage of human rights violations cases by the powerful conservative Chilean newspaper El Mercurio during the country‚Äôs 17-year dictatorship was the focus of a meticulous study by five young reporters," Daniela Estrada wrote Tuesday for Inter-Press Service. "These nearly 400 pages that we are presenting today are not only marked by rigorous, meticulous investigation by its authors, but also reflect the darkest pages in the history of Chilean journalism, which systematically violated each and every one of the precepts that make ethical journalism the essence of our profession," director Faride Zer?°n of University of Chile Institute of Communication and Image, the publisher, said at the launch of a book based on the reporting.
  • Leanita McClain and Monroe Anderson"Twenty five years ago today, I discovered that Leanita McClain, my friend and colleague, was dead," Chicago journalist Monroe Anderson wrote Memorial Day in a remembrance on his blog. "It was a suicide that came as no surprise to me. Although a young 32, Leanita was the first black and second woman on the editorial board at the Trib," he said, referring to the Chicago Tribune.
  • "The body of a veteran crime reporter was found in an irrigation ditch early Tuesday in the drug-plagued northern Mexican state of Durango, hours after he was kidnapped by gunmen from his home," E. Eduardo Castillo reported from Mexico City Tuesday for the Associated press. "Eliseo Barron was abducted by gunmen who barged into his home late Monday in the town of Gomez Palacio, beating the journalist in front of his wife and two daughters, said Ruben Lopez, spokesman of the Durango state prosecutor’s office."
  • Somali journalist Nur Muse Hussein of Radio Voice of Holy Quran died Tuesday as a result of a bullet wound he received April 20, the National Union of Somali Journalists announced. Muse Hussein, 56, was the fourth journalist to be killed in Somalia this year. The journalist was shot in the leg as he and three colleagues were covering clashes between pro-government militia and members of the Islamist Hisbul Islam movement, Reporters Without Borders said. Fighters opened fire after they introduced themselves as journalists.
  • The Associated Press has appointed veteran correspondent Andrew Selsky to the new position of Africa Editor, overseeing coverage of sub-Saharan Africa, the news cooperative announced on Friday.

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