|
27th June
|
|
Largest sex machine retailer in Europe
FREE UK next day delivery
SexMachines
|
|
Amnesty International criticises Thailand for secret lese majeste trial of red shirt protestor
|
Based on
article
from
news.bbc.co.uk
|
The
human rights group Amnesty International has condemned the secret trial in
Thailand of a woman charged with insulting the royal family.
The woman was arrested a year ago after giving a speech in Bangkok in which she
attacked the monarchy. People in Thailand who have listened to the speech say
they have never heard anything like it. Daranee Charncherngsilpakul took to the
stage at a protest in central Bangkok in June last year and sharply criticised
the monarchy. She even made personal attacks on the country's revered King
Bhumipol Adulyadej, warning him that the monarchy would be overthrown by a
popular revolution.
Given the severe penalties for insulting the monarchy in Thailand, no-one was
surprised when Ms Daranee was arrested shortly afterwards.
Her trial, however, which started this week, has alarmed human rights groups.
Red-shirt protesters in Bangkok on 12 April 2009. The presiding judge ordered
hearings to be held in secret, citing national security concerns. Her lawyer is
appealing, on the grounds that Thailand's constitution guarantees defendants the
right to a public trial.
Sam Zarifi from Amnesty International has warned that when a judge closes the
doors on a trial it significantly raises the risk of injustice taking place. The
Thai government will have a very difficult time explaining why the trial of
someone charged with making an insulting remark could compromise Thailand's
national security.
Ms Daranee faces between nine and 45 years in prison if she is convicted.
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26th June
|
|
Largest sex machine retailer in Europe
FREE UK next day delivery
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|
|
Shutting out the world prying into Japanese erotic games
|
Based on
article
from
kotaku.com
|
Erotic
Game Developer
Minori, developer of adult PC titles like Bittersweet Fools and
Angel Type, has blocked website access outside Japan.
While accessing the Minori site from Japan poses no problems, those outside the
country have been greeted with this message:
This website cannot be browsed excluding
Japan.
Some foreigners seem to be having an antipathy against EROGE (Erotic
Games).
Therefore, We prohibited the access from
foreign countries, to defend our culture. Sorry for you of the fan
that lives in a foreign country.
As we previously mentioned, these recent defensive measures from
erotic game makers come in the wake of the Rapelay controversy and
subsequent rape game banning.
...
Currently, The bill that allows to limiting
the content (It is censorship. Isn't it?) to all EROGEs is being
discussed in the Diet because intellectuals and politicians said
Japanese EROGE were being problem and troubled with the foreign
country. Therefore we should make EROGE hidden away from foreign
country, and also its content should be limited and censored.
Otherwise, you just can talk your idea about this issue at your blog
or other media to inform the existence of this problem to the public.
It would be very helpful for us.
If you do so, we might be able to recover the "Freedom of speech" and
the barricade lying in between us would be taken away.
Please help us.
We hope this separation would be only for short moment.
|
|
26th June
|
|
Largest sex machine retailer in Europe
FREE UK next day delivery
SexMachines
|
|
China takes down satellite dishes in Tibet
|
Based on
article
from
asianews.it
|
Since
April Chinese authorities have been removing satellite TV antennas in Tibetan
regions to prevent access to foreign broadcasts.
Local sources indicate that for months now, teams of technicians are working to
install cable lines for television and to remove the satellite dishes. Only
government approved programs are broadcast on cable TV, while the satellite
antennas make it possible to receive foreign programs such as RFA or Voice of
America.
Faced with protests by residents, the television technicians respond that the
order comes directly from the central authorities.
|
|
25th June
|
|
|
|
Warning shot aimed at China Google
|
Based on
article
from
guardian.co.uk
|
Google
suffered intensive disruption in China after it was warned by the authorities to
scale back its search operations.
Search functions and Gmail were inaccessible for more than an hour in a move
seen by web watchers as a warning shot across the bows by China's censors.
This is definitely a warning to Google, as well as other foreign companies,
said Xiao Qiang, the founder of China Digital Times. It is also a strong
warning to Chinese netizens. The government is showing its determination to keep
the internet under control.
Earlier in the day, the main state and communist party media - Xinhua and
People's Daily - condemned Google for providing links to pornographic websites
through its search engine. Last week, the government ordered the US company to
halt foreign website searches as a punishment.
In a rare move, the US has lodged a complaint over the tightening of censorship
rules. Google agreed to self-censor in compliance with requests by local
officials after setting up a China subsidiary and locally hosted website in
2005. One reason for this controversial decision was that its services were
frequently being disrupted or slowed. That has been rare since.
Google Cuts Features
Based on
article
from
advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
Blogger dancing with G, quoted from a Google.cn source, reported that the
company had spent a big sum of money to buy the Green Dam service for bettering
the detection of obscene content. According to the blogger, google.cn's move is
to make peace with the Chinese authority.
Moreover, Google.cn has also removed some of its search functions, including
searching for overseas content and searching with associated terms.
Anonymous Netizens Fight Back
Based on
article
from
advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
In reaction to a series of internet censorship policy, in particular
the introduction of Green Dam, a declaration has been circulated on the
net in the past two days calling netizens to express and protect their
rights to anonymity on July 1st. Below are the declaration posters and
English translation of the declaration.
2009 Declaration of the Anonymous Netizens
To the Internet censors of China,
We are the Anonymous Netizens. We have seen
your moves on the Internet. You have deprived your netizens of the
freedom of speech. You have come to see technology as your mortal
enemy. You have clouded and distorted the truth in collaboration with
Party mouthpieces. You have hired commentators to create the “public
opinion” you wanted to see. All these are etched into our collective
memory. More recently, you forced the installation of Green Dam on the
entire population and smothered Google with vicious slander. It is now
clear as day: what you want is the complete control and censorship of
the Internet. We hereby declare that we, the Anonymous Netizens, are
going to launch our attack worldwide on your censorship system
starting on July 1st, 2009.
For the freedom of the Internet, for the
advancement of Internetization, and for our rights, we are going to
acquaint your censorship machine with systematic sabotage and show you
just how weak the claws of your censorship really are. We are going to
mark you as the First Enemy of the Internet. This is not a single
battle; it is but the beginning of a war. Play with your artificial
public opinion to your heart's content, for you will soon be submerged
in the sea of warring netizens. Your archaic means of propaganda, your
epithets borrowed straight from the Cultural Revolution era, your
utter ignorance of the Internet itself - these are the tolls of your
death bell. You cannot evade us, for we are everywhere. Violence of
the state cannot save you - for every one of us that falls, another
ten rises. We are familiar with your intrigues. You label some of us
as the “vicious few” and dismiss the rest of us as unknowing
accomplices; that way you can divide and rule. Go ahead and do that.
In fact, we encourage you to do that; the more accustomed you are to
viewing your netizens this way, the deeper your self-deception.
...
|
|
20th June
|
|
|
|
Google in China ordered to end links to porn
|
Based on
article
from
xbiz.com
|
Google
has been ordered to put a halt allowing pornographic and vulgar
content from being accessed through its Chinese-language search engine,
the official Xinhua news agency reported.
The China Internet Illegal Information Reporting Center has told Google
to make immediate changes and clean up the content available at
Google.cn.
Google said it met with government officials to discuss the problem of
pornographic content and material that is harmful to children on the
web in China and that it is taking all necessary steps to fix any
problems with our results.
The order came one day after Chinese state television chastised Google
and the center denounced it for allowing foreign Internet
pornographic information.
|
|
19th June
|
|
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|
China dictates software to be pre-installed on PCs
|
8th June 2009. Based on
article
from
smarthouse.com.au
See also
Beijing may fear it, but porn means passivity not protest
from
guardian.co.uk
|
Chinese
PC Company Lenovo is set to be among the first PC Companies to bow to
Chinese Government pressure that all PC's being made for the Chinese
market after July 1, must be shipped with software that blocks access to
certain Web sites.
Chinese PC Company Lenovo is set to be among the first PC Companies to
bow to Chinese Government pressure that all PC's being made for the
Chinese market after July 1, must be shipped with software that blocks
access to certain Web sites.
The censorship move will give the Chinese Government unprecedented
control over how Chinese users access the Internet. The software must be
pre installed claims Chinese Government officials who have also said the
move is aimed at cutting out access to pornography web sites.
According to the wall Street Journal the Chinese government's history of
censoring a broad range of Web content has raised concern among some
foreign industry officials and the U.S. government that the new effort
could significantly increase the government's control over Internet
access in China.
It is expected that US manufacturers like HP and Dell who have around
22% of the Chinese PC market will bow to the demands of the Chinese
Government and install the new software which was developed by Jinhui
Computer System's with input from Beijing Dazheng Human Language
Technology Academy. Both companies have ties to China's military and its
security ministry.
Update:
Behind the Green Dam
12th June 2009. Based on
article
from
businessweek.com
See also
Seeing red over green: China to install censorship software
from
cpj.org
It
seems China is stepping back from its new censorship policy for
computers. They have recently proposed that the internet filter Green
Dam Youth Escort, should be installed on all new PCs sold in China
As TelecomAsia's Robert Clark writes, the Chinese government has
retreated on its controversial new web filtering plan. I'm not sure
it's a full-fledged retreat yet, but there are certainly signs that the
worldwide outcry is having an impact. For instance, Xinhua, the official
Chinese news agency, does seem a bit embarrassed about the whole thing.
According to the government mouthpiece, China's Ministry of Industry and
IT on Wednesday insisted that its notice to the PC makers and sellers
does not mean the software's installation to user's operating system is
mandatory, instead, the software package should be installed on either
the hard drives or a compact disc with the computers.
This is a typical pattern with off-the-wall new requirements from the
Chinese bureaucracy: Outlandish policy gets announced, outcry begins,
outlandish policy gets ignored.
Update:
Propaganda department orders positive comment about Green Dam
Based on
article
from
advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
On
June 10th, the Chinese central propaganda department issued a notice
reminding all the media to report positively on Green Dam, Youth Escort,
the filter and spyware to be installed in all PCs sold in China.
Meanwhile, netizens continue to dig out all the flaws in the software
and the company's background; Information activists and various
organizations on the other hand, have compiled a number of
documents and reports on Green Dam. .
Given the propaganda department's notice, people were surprised to see
that the government's mouthpiece people.com.cn's nationalistic “strong
country” forum had created a special page (now removed) and criticized
the Ministry of Information Industry and Technology for taking the
decision without consulting the public. Moreover, a poll in the forum
showed that more than 80% of the netizens are against the introduction
of the compulsory filter on their PCs.
Update:
Uninstallable
19th June 2009. See
article
from
news.bbc.co.uk
Widespread
disapproval inside China, legal challenges and overseas criticism have
forced the Chinese government to clarify its policy.
"The use of this software is not compulsory," an official with China's
Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) told the AP news
wire.
The state agency that created Green Dam has said it was possible to
uninstall the program. But it was unclear whether those that did so
would face prosecution.
In its ruling this week, China said anyone removing or refusing to use
it would not face official sanctions.
|
|
14th June
|
|
|
|
China bans human rights lawyers who defended christians
|
Based on
article
from
compassdirect.org
|
Li
Dunyong, one of several lawyers involved in the defense of Uyghur house
church Christian Alimjan Yimit was effectively disbarred at the end of
May when Chinese authorities turned down an annual application to renew
his law license.
Zhang Kai, another Beijing lawyer who had defended Alimjan, suffered the
same fate.
Authorities failed to renew licenses for at least 15 other lawyers who
had defended civil rights cases, religious and ethnic minorities and
political dissidents, according to watch group Human Rights in China (HRIC).
During a process of Annual Inspection and Registration for all
lawyers and law firms, with a closing date of May 31 for renewal
applications, authorities also denied three law firms the necessary
approval to practice. Officials harassed and physically abused several
of the affected lawyers in the months prior to the loss of their
licenses.
The process of building a country ruled by law has suffered a serious
setback, HRIC claimed in a statement on June 4.
The rejection of applications followed the Feb. 4 disappearance of Gao
Zhisheng, a high-profile Christian human rights activist who once said
that every human rights lawyer would eventually become a human rights
case. Gao's whereabouts remained unknown at press time.
|
|
13th June
|
|
|
|
Singapore jails couple for seditious or objectionable comics
|
Based on
article
from
monstersandcritics.com
|
A
Singapore court has sentenced a Christian couple to eight weeks in jail each for
distributing seditious or objectionable publications to Muslims, a media
report said.
Ong Kian Cheong and his wife, Dorothy Chan Hien Leng had distributed two
booklets by US publisher and comic author Jack Chick, which, according to the
judge, could spark ill-will or hostility between Christians and Muslims in
Singapore.
The pair claimed ignorance in their defence, saying they did not know the
contents of the booklets and had no reason to believe they had a seditious
tendency.
In 2007, the Protestant couple mailed Jack Chick's controversial booklets titled
The Little Bride and Who is Allah? to three Muslims who complained to the
police. Both publications are supposedly critical of Islam. When the couple were
arrested in January last year, police seized more than 400 copies of 11
reportedly seditious comics from their home, the report said.
As a multi-racial city state, Singapore clamps down on anyone who is seen to
incite tensions in the community.
|
|
12th June
|
|
|
|
New Zealand censorship fees deter releases of niche market titles
|
Based on
article
from
3news.co.nz
|
A
New Zealand film and television classification laws are being brought
into question with many businesses calling them outdated and
prohibitive.
Every film or television show that comes to New Zealand cinemas, video
stores or retail outlets has to be rated. New Zealand adopts or
cross-rates G, PG and M ratings from Australia and Britain but 15 and 18
rated films must be classified by New Zealand censors.
Video store owner Andrew Armitage says businesses just want fairness
with classification laws: We're not asking for a relaxation of
classification or censorship we just want fairness restored because it
is too often prohibitive. Armitage wants to see the threshold raised
for the 15 plus age group.
Chief Censor Bill Hastings says they have been warned against such a
move. The Australian New Zealand trans-Tasman Recognition Committee
has decided that there are sufficient differences between Australia and
New Zealand culture and law, that they recommended against creating a
single market.
For example five seasons of the television show The L Word would
have cost distributors $17,600 to be processed. Armitage says such price
tags are a huge deterrent: Anything that has this red sticker on it
has to go through the classification process, so that's $1100 worth of
classification costs right there.
Hastings says the fees have remained the same for 13 years despite
inflation, making them a bargain: Our classification fees are
extremely competitive with Australia classification fees which range
from $500 AUD to $5000 AUD. The Chief Censor can also grant fee
waivers dropping that cost to $275 each, a reduction automatically given
to film festival movies.
International film festival director Bill Gosden says costs are still
high despite the waiver: Although we do receive a concession rate, a
fee waiver from the classification office, we still spent in excess of
$30,000 last year in film censorship. Because so many titles are
unavailable locally and legitimately consumers are finding other ways to
access them, which retailers say not only affects business, but can also
lead to illegal purchase and distribution.
|
|
11th June
|
|
|
|
Chinese man jailed for 3 years for distributing free Bibles
|
Based on
article
from
compassdirect.org
|
A
Beijing court has found Christian bookstore owner Shi Weihan guilty of
illegal business operation and sentenced him to three years in
prison and a 150,000 yuan (US$21,975) fine.
Sources said Shi's store operated legally and sold only books for which
he had obtained government permission, and that his Holy Spirit Trading
Co. printed Bibles and Christian literature without authorization but
only for free distribution to local house churches.
Others in a printing company who stood trial with Shi appeared to have
received similar sentences. A written judgment is expected within 15
days to allow time for an appeal to be filed, said Ray Sharpe, a friend
of Shi.
Chinese officials claim that the Nanjing Amity Printing Co. (Amity
Press), the only government-approved Bible publisher, produces enough
Bibles to meet the needs of the Chinese church, which various religious
freedom organizations dispute. The groups complain that Amity prints a
large share of its Bibles for export, and those sold domestically are
not available to many Christians.
|
|
11th June
|
|
|
|
China restricts its first mainland gay pride event
|
Based on
article
from
ontopmag.com
|
Chinese
officials are taking steps to censor parts of China's first Gay Pride,
the BBC reported.
Shanghai Pride is mainland China's first large-scale Gay Pride
celebration but it does not include a march or parade. Instead
organizers are holding a series of cultural events to take place at
privately-owned venues.
But that's not stopping the Chinese government from banning certain
events. Officials have ordered certain owners to cancel events or face
severe consequences.
At ShanghaiPride.com, the event's official website, a blog post simply
titled Sorry alerts readers that the film screening of the
lesbian-themed Lost in You has been canceled.
The BBC reports that a second event appears to be in trouble. Officials
have targeted the staging of The Laramie Project for closure. The
play reconstructs the gruesome 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, the
University of Wyoming student beaten, shackled to a post and left to die
in a field by two men he had met in a gay bar.
Other events to be held throughout the week, art exhibits, food events
and panel discussions, appear to remain on track. The official Gay
Pride party takes place Saturday, June 13.
|
|
8th June
|
|
|
|
Philippines censors ban film festival entries
|
Based on
article
from
showbizandstyle.inquirer.net
|
The
French Film Festival in Manila, now in its 14th year, has hit a snag with the
local censors.
One of the films, Benoit Jacquot's À Tout de Suite (Right Now), was
banned (rated X) by the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB).
Martin Macalintal, audio-visual attaché of the French Embassy, said A Tout de
Suite—an entry in the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival
in 2004—was thus rated because of frontal nudity and sex scenes.
Another French film that almost got banned was Michael Haneke's Le Pianiste.
The censors passed it, Macalintal said, on condition that it will be screened
only once (June 11).
Macalintal noted that the concept of this year's fest, currently running at the
Shangri-La Plaza mall, is to bring Cannes to Manila.
Macalintal said organizers had planned to premiere Kinatay, which won the
Best Director prize for Brillante Mendoza in Cannes last month, but they were
sure it would encounter problems with the MTRCB. Mendoza earlier told the
Philippine Daily Inquirer that he would allow a local screening only if the
censors didn't touch his movie.
|
|
7th June
|
|
|
|
Malaysian newspaper suspended over race issues
|
Based on
article
from
mt.m2day.org
|
The
Centre for Independent Journalism strongly disagrees with calls to suspend Malay
daily Utusan Malaysia for publishing commentary with racial undertone and
to penalise its author, who writes under the pseudonym Awang Selamat, with the
Sedition Act.
On 3 June, the Malaysian Indian Congress president, S. Samy Vellu urged
the authorities to charge Awang Selamat, under the Sedition Act. This followed
the publication of an article Malays betrayed? published in the daily's
column on 31 May, in which non-Malays were said to have over demanded
their rights.
Open and civil discussions on race and religion are instrumental for
nation-building. Through such discussion, the norms and mores of free
expression, such as the ethical boundaries would evolve. But to ban certain
views, especially by giving absolute powers to the state to censor, is a grave
violation of freedom of expression for the individual and the community.
We call on all political leaders and opinion leaders to emphasize the importance
of dialogue and debates and refrain from demanding for the use of undemocratic
laws. We also urge the editors of Utusan Malaysia to create spaces in the
newspaper for those with differing views and opinions on the issue and show that
it is interested in constructive engagement.
|
|
6th June
|
|
|
|
Indonesian suffers bad treatment from hospital and worse from the justice system
|
Based on
article
from
news.bbc.co.uk
|
An
Indonesian woman who complained about her hospital treatment in an email
to friends has been charged with defamation and could face a jail term.
Prita Mulyasari has already been found guilty and fined $30,000 in a
civil case. She faces six years in jail and a $100,000 (£62,000) fine if
convicted on criminal charges.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono - in the middle of an election
campaign - has urged the courts to be lenient, while his predecessor and
election rival, Megawati Sukarnoputri, has visited Prita Mulyasari in
jail.
The case centres on emails Prita Mulyasari sent detailing her experience
as a patient at Omni hospital to 10 friends. According to the Jakarta
Globe, she said staff initially diagnosed her with dengue fever, but
later said she had a virus and gave her an injection. She said her
conditioned worsened and she began to feel numbness so decided to switch
hospitals. But when she asked for her medical notes with the initial
diagnosis, the hospital refused to give them to her, she alleged.
The emails were widely circulated on internet mailing lists and the
Facebook social networking site.
Omni hospital said her allegations had caused the firm substantial
financial losses from patient boycotts and frozen business deals.
But her supporters - nearly 100,000 of whom have signed a Facebook
appeal for her release - say it could set a dangerous precedent for
freedom of speech in the country.
The growing outrage over the case led to Prita Mulyasari's release from
custody on Wednesday, where she had spent three weeks without charge
after losing the civil case in mid-May.
Update:
On Trial
16th June 2009. See
article
from
advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
Two days after her release from jail, the first court session for Prita
Mulyasari, an Indonesian housewife who was arrested and jailed since mid
May for “defaming” an international hospital by writing an online
complaint letter took place in Tangerang, one of Jakarta's suburban.
Her arrest had the entire Indonesian blogosphere boggling, as many
believes that by jailing her could indicate a weak freedom of speech in
the country.
With citizens heading for the ballot next month, Prita's case has been
as a matter of urgency by three presidential hopefuls.
Poster by Paman Tyo, posted on “
The case is now under many Indonesians' watchful eyes. Facebookers shows
support for Prita through several Groups and Support for Prita Mulyasari
Cause has reached 316.448 supporters, while Twitterers write updates
about press conferences and court hearing.
Update: Acquitted
17th July 2011. See article
from bbc.co.uk
An Indonesian woman has been given a six-month suspended jail term
for libel, after she complained about treatment she received in a
hospital.
Prita Mulyasari criticised the hospital in e-mails that her friends
posted on Facebook more than three years ago.
Criminal and civil complaints were both dismissed in earlier
hearings, but the Supreme Court overruled the lower courts and sentenced
her.
The case sparked a huge outcry and was an issue in the 2009 general
election.
Senior politicians including President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
offered his support for her case, and his rival Megawati Sukarnoputri
visited her in jail.
Many Indonesians feel that the judicial system favours the rich and
powerful over ordinary people, and Ms Mulyasari's case seemed to chime
with that view.
Lawyers for the 34-year-old say they have not decided whether to
appeal against the Supreme Court's decision.
|
|
4th June
|
|
|
|
Bali governor refuses to enforce repressive pornography law
|
Based on
article
from
digital.asiaone.com
|
Indonesia's
mainly Hindu island of Bali has no intention of enforcing a
controversial anti-porn law passed last year because it conflicts with
local culture and tradition, the provincial governor said in an email
interview.
The new law, which created much confusion over what would be considered
pornographic, was slammed by religious minorities but backed by the
Islamic and Islamist political parties allied to President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyon.
As long as I am the governor of Bali, I, along with the head of the
provincial government in Bali, have stated that we will not enforce this
law in Bali, Governor I Made Mangku Pastika told Reuters, adding
that the law is not appropriate for the people of Bali.
He said the most serious effect of the law would be its impact on Bali's
culture and traditional art, which includes nude statues and often
sexually explicit imagery.
Centuries-old traditions including outdoor bathing would also have to be
banned if the law was properly enforced, added the governor.
Pastika said that he had not yet been reprimanded by the central
government, despite his stated aim to disobey the law.
|
|
4th June
|
|
|
|
'I should have censored Internet when I was PM'
|
Based on
article
from
digital.asiaone.com
|
JThe
digital age has been weighing heavily on former Malaysian premier
Mahathir Mohamad's mind.
He broached the subject in two separate talks. On 16 May, he spoke about
Internet porn at Bloggers Universe Malaysia 2009. In his speech he said
he regretted the pledge he made not to regulate the Internet when he was
prime minister.
I wish we can control... When we started the Multimedia Super
Corridor, we promised the people that we will not censor the Internet.
But at times, I regretted this. Dr Mahathir said he had surfed porn
sites just to see how easy it is for a child to do so. My God,
it was so easy. All you've got to do is to put 'SEX' and you get
everything, all the filth in the world would be shown to you - in
motion.
But Internet censorship is out, he said: While in the past, we can
close down the printing shops, we can seize their papers, we can do a
lot of things, today, it is just impossible.
|
|
3rd June
|
|
|
|
Japanese software companies to self censor and ban rape games
|
Based on
article
from
kotaku.com
|
Japan's
Ethics Organization of Computer Software have now held an emergency
meeting in which nearly 100 representatives from various erotic game
companies concluded that the manufacturer and sale of rape-type games
should cease. This was not a government decision or even a legal one,
but instead a self-policing policy on the part of the EOCS.
None of the representatives thought it was out of line to ban these
types of games, and many felt this was the only way to rectify any
problems caused by these types of games.
Future regulations regarding games will be worked out in the future.
Until then, the EOCS will work with individual erotic game companies to
help ease the transition.
|
|
3rd June
|
|
|
|
China marks anniversary of Tiananmen Square with a month of oppression
|
Based on
article
from
google.com
|
China
is blocking access to Microsoft's new search engine, Bing, and its
Hotmail email service, the company said ahead of the 20th anniversary of
the Tiananmen Square crackdown.
These are among several Internet services that have been blocked for
customers in China, Microsoft director of public affairs Kevin Kutz
said in a statement received by AFP.
Microsoft did not say when China began blocking the sites, but Reporters
Without Borders (RSF) said it had been notified by Chinese Web users
that access to the websites began being blocked inside China on Tuesday.
Reporters Without Borders is outraged by the blockage of a dozen
websites such as Twitter, YouTube, Bing, Flickr, Opera, Live, Wordpress
and Blogger in China, the media rights group said in a statement:
The Chinese government stops at nothing to silence what happened 20
years ago in Tiananmen Square. By blocking access to a dozen websites
used daily by millions of Chinese citizens, the authorities have opted
for censorship at any price rather than accept a debate about this
event.
Asked to comment on the Chinese moves, a US State Department spokesman
said there would be a more expansive US response on Wednesday, but
underscored that US policy supports freedom of expression.
[Except of course for the countries where the
US itself blocks the use of Microsoft services such as Messenger in
Cuba, Syria, Iran, Sudan and North Korea].
Rights group Freedom House, which is funded by the US government and
private groups, condemned the Chinese government?s blocking of the
websites. China's decision to block these sites today represents the
latest salvo in a relentless campaign to erase the past," executive
director Jennifer Windsor said in a statement: China is blocking
sites like Twitter and Flickr because they provide a means for people to
circumvent government control and mobilize dissent.
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3rd June
|
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|
Malaysian Catholics lose bid to use the word 'Allah' pending July court case
|
Based on
article
from
christiantoday.com
|
The
Catholic Church in Malaysia has lost its latest bid to use 'Allah' as a
translation for 'God' in its newspaper pending a further court case now
set for 7th July 2009.
High Court judge Lau Bee Lan made the decision after hearing submissions
from two counsels for the applicant, Archbishop Datuk Murphy Nicholas
Xavier Pakiam, and two counsels for the respondent, the Home Ministry,
according to Bernama, Malaysian National News Agency.
A spokesmand for the Home Ministry told reporters outside the chambers
that if the High Court allowed the church to use ‘Allah' in a non-Muslim
context, it would be helping the church to commit an offense under state
laws. This means that the church's weekly news publication, The Herald,
cannot use the word until the court decides.
The Rev Father Lawrence Andrew, who edits the Catholic weekly, was
disappointed with the outcome: We had asked them to lift the ban so
that we can use the word until the court decides. We are innocent until
proven guilty, so why shouldn't we use it, Father Andrew told AFP:The
court is going to hear our case on July 7 so that's an opening in the
dark tunnel.
Under the Control and Restriction of the Propagation of non-Islamic
Religious Enactment passed into law by 10 states in 1988, it is an
offence for non-Muslims to use the word ‘Allah' to refer to any God
other than the Muslim God.
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3rd June
|
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Philippines considers bill to give right of reply applying to all media
|
Based on
article
from
newsinfo.inquirer.net
|
The
controversial right of reply bill will not only affect print and broadcast
media, but could lead to Internet censorship since it also covers bloggers,
“texters” and even iPod users, a party-list lawmaker warned Saturday.
Rep. Mong Palatino said the bill's sponsor in the House, Bienvenido Abante,
admitted during interpellation that House Bill No. 3306 also covers websites,
e-mails, Internet social networking sites and other electronic devices in its
scope.
Palatino noted that Section 1 of HB 3306 states, All persons, natural or
judicial, who are accused directly or indirectly of committing, having
committed, or are criticized by innuendo, suggestion or rumor for any lapse in
behavior in public or private life shall have the right to reply to charges or
criticisms published in newspapers, magazines, newsletters or publications
circulated commercially or for free, or aired or broadcast over radio,
television, websites or through any electronic device.
The bill, therefore, would not only affect media outfits and journalists but
also all website owners, website masters, e-mail account holders and other
netizens who are not necessarily media practitioners, said Palatino who has
been a blogger since 2004. He said the bill would affect: the more than five
million bloggers and millions more of Internet users in the country.
My fear is that when this bill comes to law, it will be used to regulate the
content of the Internet, when we are checking our e-mails, when we open our
Friendster or Facebook accounts, when we are checking our websites. Does this
mean that we will be compelled to moderate, modify or edit our personal
websites? Is this not Internet censorship and suppression of freedom of speech
and expression? Palatino said.
In reply, Abante said the bill would be defined more clearly through its
implementing rules and regulations (IRR).
But Palatino said that Congress should just remove the line any electronic
device in the bill's first section. The bill is still up for amendments in
the House. He also encouraged bloggers, netizens, texters and concerned youth to
register their opposition to the apparent railroading of the bill in
Congress.
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|
2nd June
|
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|
Burma's newspaper censors ban Phoenix Journal and True News
|
Based on
article
from
seapabkk.org
|
Burma's
government censor board suspended this week's issue of the Phoenix Journal
after it published several censored news articles.
The journal was also told by the board to publish only entertainment news in its
future issues.
The news story in question was the objection by “Eleven Media Group” against the
“Lucky Eleven” advertisement by the Yangon Media Group in its 27 May issue.
True Censors
Based on
article
from
irrawaddy.org
Senior editors and staff of the True News Journal in Rangoon were
summoned to appear before the censor board of Burma's military regime on Monday
following the distribution of the publication at Insein Prison, the location of
Aung San Suu Kyi's trial.
The Press Scrutiny and Registration Board told the publication that it objected
to the headline on a story written by Ludu Sein Win, an outspoken, veteran
journalist, which said: Newsmen dare express the truth and risk arrest.
An unidentified staff of the journal apparently sold copies of the journal to
people in the crowd outside the prison last week and displayed a small sign
saying, The True Journal which dares to report the truth, according to
sources.
The staff who sold the journal in front of the prison was arrested in the
journal's office on May 28, sources said, and later released.
|
|
2nd June
|
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Filmmaker joins politicians aiming to reduce Philippines film censorship powers
|
Based on
article
from
abs-cbnnews.com
|
Internationally-renowned
director Lav Diaz has joined other committed local filmmakers in calling for the
scrapping of the repressive Presidential Decree No. 1986 created by the late
Philippins dictator Ferdinand Marcos, which is still in effect through the Movie
and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB).
House Bill No. 6425, introduced recently in the lower House seeks to transform
the current MTRCB into a film and classification body.
The bill is twenty two years overdue, said Diaz, citing the 1987
Constitution which enshrined freedom of expression in the Bill of Rights.
Under the proposed bill, the ominous “X” rating ban, which stifles freedom of
expression, will be replaced by a Certified Not For Regular Theatrical
Release classification.
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|
30th May
|
|
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|
Rape games to be banned in Japan from June
|
29th May 2009. Based on article
from zepy.momotato.com
See also Is Possessing RapeLay a Federal Crime in the United States?
from gamepolitics.com
|
TBS news reports that all rape games will be banned from sale or production in Japan.
It is estimated that this particular genre takes up about 10% to 20% of the entire industry but the PC software independent review committee has made the decision to ban all these games.
The PC games review committee had originally not seen it as a problem, but now it has come to the point where the entire game software industry has to comply to the new restrictions.
The committee will change their censorship guidelines starting from the 2nd of June, and the approximately 200 member companies will be restricted from the production and sale of rape games.
The news article reports that the reason for doing so started with the campaigning efforts of the International woman’s rights organization Equality Now which had started due to the problems found with the sale of Rapelay in other countries.
Update: Jumping the Gun
30th May 2009. See article
from gamepolitics.com
The embers of the RapeLay controversy were stirred a bit yesterday with a report that the game - and others of its ilk - had been banned in Japan. Not by the government, mind you, but by an industry standards organization.
As it turned out, the report was false:
The news source TBS jumped the gun and exaggerated everything. If it is really decided that rape games will be regulated we’ll definitely at least have till past July to comply. The used game market will probably still be OK.
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30th May
|
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|
Singapore christians found guilt of sedition
|
Thanks to Alan
Based on article
from news.yahoo.com
|
A Christian Singaporean couple were found guilty of sedition for distributing evangelical publications that cast Islam in a negative light.
Ong Kian Cheong and his wife Dorothy Chan had been charged with distributing a seditious publication to two Muslims in October and March 2007 and sending a second such booklet to another Muslim in December that same year, a district court official told AFP.
The publications were found to have promoted feelings of ill-will and hostility between Christians and Muslims, the Straits Times said.
A hearing was set for June 4 for mitigation pleas and sentencing.
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29th May
|
|
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|
Vietnam to censor information about conceiving boys rather than girls
|
Based on article
from earthtimes.org
|
Vietnam is banning websites that post articles on how to give birth to children of a particular sex, a government official said.
The articles, including some on leading Vietnamese news websites, offer advice on sexual techniques, food and drink and timing intercourse so as to purportedly determine the sex of one's baby.
A study just released by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) found the gender ratio among newborns in Vietnam last year rose to 112 boys for every 100 girls, up from 110 to 100 in 2005.
Tran Van Trung, chief investigator of Vietnam's Ministry of Health said inspectors were checking websites hosted throughout the country in preparation for a report to the Health Ministry at the end of May. I think the information is obviously not
accurate, but people still want to try, Trung said. [then why would they want to ban it?]
One popular news website, VietBao.vn, advised couples to make love at exactly 3 am on the day after ovulation and to eat a low-calcium diet. The website, registered to Vietnam's Ministry of Information and Communication, promised a success rate of
96%.
Trung said after the inspection of internet sites was complete, inspectors would move on to checking hospitals and clinics that have ultrasound machines which can detect a fetus's sex.
Sons are considered more desirable than daughters in traditional Vietnamese culture. Sons are necessary to continue the family line, and firstborn sons are assigned to carry out duties of ancestor worship which daughters cannot assume.
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29th May
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|
Real sex art film causing grief at the South Korean censors
|
Based on article
from hollywoodreporter.com
The uncut region 2 DVD is available with an 18 rating at UK Amazon
|
Mexican director Carlos Reygadas' Battle in Heaven has been given a restricted rating by a local censorship body for the third time, virtually banning the film from release.
Last week, the Korea Media Rating Board categorized the film's obscenity level as very high, explaining in a jury statement that the film's sexual depiction is too extreme and therefore could challenge the general sentiment of an ordinary
citizen.
The film, which tells of a working-class couple kidnapping an infant for ransom, had been first submitted to the board in 2005. Citing the film's supposedly overt sexual content, the board gave the film restricted rating, which limits the screening to adult
cinemas only. However, no such cinema exists in the country.
World Cinema, the film's local importer, proposed the board for a second review. It received the same rating, and the case eventually went to the Constitutional Court, which in July ruled against the vague standards of the censorship regulations stipulated
by the board.
In the ruling for Battle in Heaven , the board pointed to the film's problematic close-up scenes of the male lead's erect genitalia.
Byun Seok-jong, the representative of World Cinema, refuses to blur out scenes for the film's release. He said: What's the point of going to a theater and see the censored version of a film if you can download the film at home and see the director's version?
This is already a losing game.
|
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26th May
|
|
|
|
Chinese academic successfully sues internet company for closing his website
|
Based on article
from irishtimes.com
|
A Chinese academic has successfully sued an internet company for closing his website after he posted articles on subjects including corruption
and environmental issues.
Hu Xingdou, professor of economics at the Beijing Institute of Technology, said he hoped his case would encourage other users to protect their rights and internet censors to make decisions more responsibly.
I was surprised when I won. In the past, there have been people suing like me, but either the court did not take the case or they failed. This is the first successful case in China of a netizen or internet user suing their internet service provider,
Prof Hu said.
He now plans to sue the authorities who ordered the internet service provider to act, but predicts his case will be thrown out. It is a shame that the supervisor can currently define any information as illegal as there are not developed laws about this.
Hu believes the censors stepped in because he posted an article about media coverage of algae in a lake in Jiangsu province.
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26th May
|
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|
Chinese province bans the use of aliases on forums and chatrooms etc
|
Based on article
from english.ntdtv.com
|
China's authorities have long censored information on the internet. But now officials in some areas take online policing even further.
China's Hubei Province has put in place a Real Name System. It requires that people use their real names—not aliases or other screennames—when accessing web sites, blogs, podcasts, and mobile networks.
Officially the rules are supposed to deter users from writing, quote, vulgarities and malicious comments .
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26th May
|
|
|
|
Malaysia considers requiring bloggers to register with the authorities
|
Based on article
from advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
|
Recent news reports state that Information, Malaysia's Communications and Culture Minister, Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim, announced that
bloggers using locally hosted websites may be required to register with the authorities.
According to Rais, registration was one of the measures the government was considering to prevent the spread of negative or malicious content on the Internet.
Respected Malaysian blogger, Ahirudin Attan of Rocky's Bru, was reported to have said that the proposal was effectively the government's bid to control what Malaysians were writing online.
Ahirudin said the move would merely encourage bloggers to host their blogs overseas. Blogger and activisit, Marina Mahathir, was reported to have said that the Government really should “get real”, as the move “is just going to make Malaysia look ridiculous
in the eyes of the world.”
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25th May
|
|
|
|
Samoa bans Angels and Demons
|
Based on article
from news.ninemsn.com.au
|
The Pacific island state of Samoa has banned the movie Angels and Demons , Radio New Zealand International reported.
It quoted censor Lei'ataua Olo'apu, who is Roman Catholic, as saying that the film is critical of the Catholic Church and the ban will avoid any religious discrimination by other denominations and faiths against the church.
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25th May
|
|
|
|
Japanese political party takes aim at adult games like Rapely
|
Based on article
from sankakucomplex.com
|
Japan’s Koumeito party, long a member of the ruling coalition, has condemned adult games featuring sexual coercion and violence as being
a highly negative influence on Japan’s tiny rates of sex crimes. They are calling for a ban or further restrictions on their sale.
As part of the deliberations of its Project Team for Creating a Protective Rearing Environment for Children offered a variety of baseless claims, such as: There is a very good chance that the influence of violent sex games far exceeds that of
regular pornography.
Their (foregone) conclusion was that the government must consider a ban or further restrictions on eroge in order to protect the children from their pernicious influence. No evidence, scientific or otherwise, was presented in support of any of their claims.
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25th May
|
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|
Malaysia said to have just 3 members on its National Censorship Board.
|
Based on article
from thestar.com.my
|
Just three people decide what Malaysians can or cannot see on our screens.
They are the three panel members of the National Censorship Board.
Is it right to have only three authorised persons, representing the country’s 26 million people, to watch and suppress anything considered unacceptable for public viewing? said Senator and veteran artiste Tan Sri Jins Shamsuddin.
He said the board needed more panel members, adding that many films needed to be screened and that there was a dire need for more people to perform the job: We need more panel members including intellectuals and religious scholars to be part of the team.
Credible Media, Ethical Masses.
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23rd May
|
|
|
|
Thailand adds 72 gaming and gambling sites to extensive block list
|
Based on article
from bangkokpost.com
|
A Thai Criminal Court has ordered the closure of 72 websites offering access to online gambling and games.
The court order follows the death of a 12-year-old boy who jumped from the sixth-floor balcony of his school building after he was banned from playing computer games by his father.
Department of Special Investigation (DSI) deputy chief Suchart Wong-anandchai said under a May 19 order issued by the Criminal Court to the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Ministry, the agency was told to shut down 72 websites seen as encouraging
people to place online bets or hooking them on computer games.
Pol Col Suchart, who also sits on the ICT's subcommittee on internet safety, said it was the first time that a court order had been issued in the country to close websites offering online gambling opportunities.
From now on any provider found to encourage or provide online gambling will not only face a jail term and a fine, but also have his/her ISP licence revoked by the ICT, he said.
Among the 72 websites facing closure are 368sb.com and 88suncity.com, both based in the Cagayan Special Economic Zone of the Philippines.
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22nd May
|
|
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|
Misinformation is like toxic food that causes damage to the viewer's brain
|
Based on article
from nationmultimedia.com
|
Thai people had little need for multiple media outlets such as cable TV and websites since most spread misinformation, which caused
bigger social division, Bangkok Senator Rosana Tositakul claimed.
Do we really need so many media channels? And how could we control a large number of media channels, anyway? Rosana asked at a seminar entitled How to Reform the New Media , held by Thammasat University's Faculty of Journalism
and Communications.
Rosana said media reports about misinformation incited hatred, so the media should report with more conscience.
Misinformation is like toxic food that causes damage to the viewer's brain, Rosana said.
However, Adisak Limparungpattanakit, who heads the Satellite Television Association of Thailand, said a new national broadcasting and telecommunications commission should not only try to control the media, but help people across the country get access. It
should also encourage outlets to produce more good content instead of only blocking 'bad' content.
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22nd May
|
|
|
|
Singapore reviews its censorship laws
|
Based on article
from channelnewsasia.com
|
An independent Censorship Review Committee will be appointed to conduct a mid-term review of content issues across the spectrum of broadcast,
films, videos, publications, audio materials, the arts and new media. Content issues on the Internet and new media are likely to feature prominently.
If filmmaker Tan Pin Pin could have her way, she would like the ban on the use of dialects to be lifted or reviewed.
And the re-classification of film and video content by age, instead of genre like political, nudity, violence and homosexual themes.
Choo Zheng Xi, editor, The Online Citizen, said: Something I hope the review commission keeps in mind is whether censorship and filtration is practical in the age of the Internet. I hope they take into consideration the Advisory Council on the Impact of
New Media, or AIMS' request that the symbolic ban on the 100 websites is abolished.
So in my opinion the best way forward is repealing Section 33 of the Films Act on political films and fundamentally reconsidering the Class Licence Scheme which deems all local websites to be automatically licensed and requires content providers of political
and religious websites to register with the Media Development Authority of Singapore.
The new Censorship Review Committee will also look at the implication of the convergence of multiple media platforms. The new committee starts work by the third quarter of this year and will complete its work by the middle of 2010.
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21st May
|
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|
Reporters Without Borders criticises Thai TV political censorship
|
Based on article
from rsf.org
|
Reporters Without Borders is alarmed by a government announcement on 14 May that it will introduce new regulations for community
radio stations and cable and satellite TV stations aimed at controlling programme content. Broadcasters would be required to seek permission for each programme being aired, the government said.
The adoption of these regulations would deal a fatal blow to free expression in Thailand, which is already heavily restricted on the Internet, Reporters Without Borders said. The government will have the power to ban programmes that question their
policies and legitimacy. We urge the authorities to scrap this plan.
Sathit Wongnongtoey, the minister in charge of the prime minister’s office, said: Once the regulations take effect, any broadcast station airing content deemed to be politically incendiary will not be allowed to operate.
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17th May
|
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|
|
Taiwan legislators call for age restrictions on computer games
|
Based on article
from gamepolitics.com
|
Officials in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan, are demanding that the city government draft legislation requiring retailers and cyber-cafe operators
to adhere to game content ratings.
As reported by the Taipei Times, Chinese Nationalist Party councilors Lee Yen-hsiu and Chin Li-fan led the call for rating enforcement. Lee commented:
Chin told the newspaper that an amendment expected to pass later this year would ban sales of mature-themed online and single-player games to younger players:
The amendment would require Internet cafes and shops that sell computer software to stop selling restricted online games to teenagers, but it does not stipulate any fine for businesses that refuse to cooperate. This is a passive regulation.
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16th May
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|
Rapelay game approved by Japanese (self) censors
|
Based on article
from gamepolitics.com
|
The controversial Japanese game RapeLay was cleared by a software industry screening board, reports The Yomiuri Shimbun.
According to the newspaper, the Tokyo-based Ethics Organization of Computer Software screened RapeLay without advising its publisher, Illusion, to make any edits. 235 computer game firms belong to the supposedly self-regulating organization.
While an unnamed official of the group would not reveal its screening standards, he told the newspaper:
[The organization] follows the Penal Code and the law, which bans child prostitution and child pornography. Also, we ask for self-regulation of games, to ensure stories depicted stay at a permissible level from a social perspective...
[Given the RapeLay controversy the organization] should discuss what kind of self-imposed regulations are required to ensure [games] are acceptable to society.
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14th May
|
|
|
|
Thai political groups on satellite TV
|
Based on article
from bangkokpost.com
|
Political content on community radio and satellite TV stations will be banned under proposed regulations issued by Thailand's National
Telecommunications Commission.
The government said it would enforce the changes evenly against any broadcaster which offends, including the red shirt-run DStation and yellow shirt-owned ASTV satellite TV stations.
Prime Minister's Office Minister Sathit Wongnongtoey said the regulations would allow the NTC to take action against community radio and satellite TV stations which air content deemed to undermine democracy.
The regulations require cable TV and satellite TV channels to seek permission for each programme being aired, Sathit said: Once the regulations take effect, any broadcast station airing content deemed to be politically incendiary won't be allowed to operate.'
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14th May
|
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|
Lou Ye defies Chinese 5 year ban on film making
|
Based on article
from news.bbc.co.uk
|
Chinese director Lou Ye has defied a five-year state ban on making films by premiering a new movie at the Cannes Film Festival.
Ye was banned in 2006 for screening epic love story Summer Palace at that year's Cannes festival without Chinese government permission.
Now Spring Fever , a story about love and homosexuality, is among 20 films competing for this year's Palme d'Or. It was shot secretly with a handheld camera in China using five actors.
It could be his most controversial film yet because it deals with homosexuality in China - still a taboo subject in the country.
Producer Nai An, who is also subject to the five-year ban, told the AFP news agency she feared the new film would provoke more trouble.
Actor Chen Sicheng, who appears in Spring Fever, also said he feared he would be in trouble in China over his involvement. He told AFP that Ye was a pioneer who had the courage not to give way to society.
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11th May
|
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|
Journalists reported that murderous soldiers had been released early from jail
|
Based on article
from stuff.co.nz
|
Two journalists have been released after spending two nights in police cells when they reported how the Fiji military dictatorship had freed
soldiers jailed for killing civilians.
Dionisia Turagabeci and Shelvin Chand, of the website Fijilive, were released on Monday, Radio New Zealand has reported. It is likely the two journalists will be taken before the Magistrates Court and charged with breaking the emergency regulations.
Earlier this year a soldier was convicted of murdering a civilian. In a separate case nine soldiers and three policemen were convicted of the manslaughter of a civilian. They were sent to jail for terms ranging from eight years to life, but last week all were
released on parole. They had been convicted of manslaughter after graphic evidence of how they tortured 19-year-old Sakiusa Rabaka to death a month after the 2006 coup.
Fijilive reported this on Friday and on Saturday Turagabeci and Chand were picked up and taken to Suva Central Police Station.
Last week military spokesman Neumi Leweni hailed the effect of martial law censorship: The people of Fiji are now experiencing a remarkable change from what used to be highly negative and sensationalised news to a more positive, balanced and responsible
reporting by the media.
Dictator Voreqe Bainimarama imposed martial law on Fiji last month and has extended it another month, imposing censorship on all media.
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10th May
|
|
|
|
80 political activists arrested in Perak, Malaysia
|
Based on article
from prachatai.com
|
Malaysian authorities have arrested 80 writers, activists, members of opposition during protests.
The Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ) is deeply worried that the new administration under Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak has begun a swoop of those publicly opposed to the takeover of the northern state of Perak by the ruling Federal government
Barisan Nasional.
According to report, the government has so far arrested close to 80 people involved in organising and participating in a protest campaign, which includes writers, opposition members of Parliament and activists. Among the 80, 60 were arrested on 6 May in Ipoh,
capital of the Perak state where a protest gathering was held. The sequence of actions betrays premeditation on the side of the powers-that-be and this raises worry that the clampdown will be the first of more to come.
The slew of arrests started on 5 May when police first targeted Wong Chin Huat, an academic and writer. Wong is the spokesperson for the Coalition for Free and Fair Elections (BERSIH), which initiated a campaign dubbed '1BlackMalaysia' calling Malaysians to
wear black on the day the Perak State Legislative Assembly was to reconvene on 7 May.
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5th May
|
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Thailand's film censors cut Crank: High Voltage
|
Based on article
from blog.nationmultimedia.com
|
The frenetically paced, ultra-violent Hollywood action comedy Crank: High Voltage has been snipped by Thai censors, who objected to a sex scene that takes place in view of a crowded grandstand at a horse-racing track.
In this sequel, hitman Chev Chelios' (Jason Statham) heart has been stolen and replaced with a battery-powered ticker, so he needs to generate electricity from friction to keep pumping.
In the censored version, the sex scene at the race track simply cuts to the crowd's excited reaction of seeing the couple copulate in the dirt. And then Chev and the dishevelled Eve are on the run from the police.
Earlier in the film, Chev meets his girlfriend at a go-go bar, where other dancers are topless, and naked breasts are clearly seen. But Smart's character, who has become a go-go dancer since the first film, has black electrical-tape X's over her nipples.
In the US, Crank: High Voltage is rated R (admission to viewers under 17 only with a parent or guardian) for frenetic strong bloody violence throughout, crude and graphic sexual content, nudity and pervasive language.
The UK's film censor, the BBFC, explains its 18 uncut rating more fully
CRANK 2 is the sequel to an American action film about a man involved with a crime syndicate who has an artificial heart that requires regular doses of electricity to keep working. It was passed '18' for strong and brutal violence,
gory moments, sex and very strong language.
Violent scenes include a man having the barrel of a rifle pushed into his anus as a means of interrogation; and frequent shoot-outs with generous spurts of blood. Violent and gory scenes include partially graphic sight of a man slicing off his own nipples
and a man having the skin on his elbow sliced off. Such scenes go comfortably beyond what can be accepted at '15' under BBFC Guidelines which state, 'Violence may be strong but may not dwell on the infliction off pain or injury'. However, the exaggerated and
rather unrealistic treatment of the violence, coupled with the intended black humour, mean this does not raise harm concerns which might have prevented it being passed for an adult audience.
Very strong language is used clearly at least four times and this also requires restriction to an adult audience.
There are also scenes showing sexual activity, the strongest of which is a sex scene at a race-track which features full body shots of various sexual positions with naked buttocks. Pixelation masks the strongest detail.
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5th May
|
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Philippines censor whinges at university showing of banned film
|
Based on article
from abs-cbnnews.com
|
Philippine's Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB) has asked the director of the film, Aurora
, to explain why the uncut version of the movie was shown at the University of the Philippines without the permission from the board.
The independent movie was banned as unfit for public viewing by the MTRCB but it was shown just the same at the UP Film Institute (UPFI) Cine Adarna in January.
The MTRCB said the film was screened for commercial gain and without the corresponding permit to exhibit from the body. The MTRCB has already instructed director Adolf Alix Jr. to submit his counter-affidavit to explain his side.
Filmmaker Sean Lim, the representative of Oxin Entertainment, had already submitted his counter-affidavit to the MTRCB. Oxin Entertainment is the company that released Aurora. Lim, in his written testimony, said the film was part of an educational
screening at the UPFI and the scheduled showing was under the pretext of the state university’s aim in promoting academic freedom.
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4th May
|
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|
Philippines gets decision to ban TV programme for 3 months confirmed by Supreme Court
|
Based on article
from newsinfo.inquirer.net
|
Philipppine's Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB) to suspend
TV program Ang Dating Daan for three months.
The MTRCB imposed a three-month suspension of the religious show on UNTV 37 after its host, petitioner Eliseo S. Soriano, was found to have uttered supposedly offensive and obscene remarks during its August 10, 2004 broadcast.
In an 11-4 vote, the High court, through Associate Justice Presbitero Velasco, said the suspension is not a prior restraint but rather a form of permissible administrative sanction or subsequent punishment.
In affirming the power of the MTRCB to issue an order of suspension, the High court said that it is a sanction that the MTRCB may validly impose under its charter without running afoul of the free speech clause.
A dissenting view from Justice Carpio called the suspension an unconstitutional prior restraint on freedom of expression which should not have been allowed. According to Justice Carpio, prior restraints may only be justified if they are either
pornography, false or misleading advertisement, advocacy of imminent lawless action, and [or] danger to national security, and obviously, what petitioner uttered does not fall under any of the four.
Update: Upheld in the Supreme Court
18th March 2010. See article
from businessmirror.com.ph
The Supreme Court en banc has upheld with finality its decision which declared legal the three-month suspension imposed by the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB) on the television program Ang Dating Daan owing to the
use of supposedly offensive and obscene language by its host, Eliseo Brother Eli Soriano, during its August 10, 2004, broadcast.
In a vote of 11-4, the Court denied the motion for reconsideration filed by Soriano seeking the reversal of its April 29, 2009, decision which upheld MTRCB's three-month suspension of Ang Dating Daan , a televised Bible exposition program.
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30th April
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Human rights groups call on Thailand to revise lese majeste laws
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Based on article
from rsf.org
See also Media caught in the middle of Thai conflict
from cpj.org
by Shawn W Crispin
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I posted a video of the king on the Internet, Suwicha Thakor told Reporters Without Borders from behind a plexiglas screen in Bangkok’s Klong Prem prison on 20 April. The police should have told me what I was doing was wrong. It is not right to
be sentenced to 10 years in prison for this. I am not a problem for the country or its security. I am in prison for nothing.
Suwicha was given the 10-year sentence on 3 April on a charge of lese majeste. Reporters Without Borders wrote to the king yesterday asking him to grant Suwicha a royal pardon.
Reporters Without Borders and 31 other human rights, press freedom and journalists organisations have issued a joint appeal to the Thai government for a revision of article 112 of the Thai criminal code on lese majeste.
Since a new government took over last December, the authorities have stepped up enforcement of the lese majeste law and the Internet has been one of the leading victims. Access to more than 50,000 websites is currently blocked because of content critical
of the monarchy. Around ten people are being prosecuted (or have been prosecuted) for lese majeste and two of them have been convicted. The crime of lese majeste is punishable by three to 15 years in prison.
Call to the Prime Minister to review the lese majeste law:
We, human rights groups, journalists and the victims of arbitrary lese majeste prosecutions appeal to Thai authorities to review criminal code article 112 on national security offences, under which any defamatory, insulting or
threatening comments about the king, queen, crown prince or regent is deemed to be a crime of lese majeste punishable by three to 15 years in prison.
Access to more than 50,000 webpages has been blocked because of content critical of the monarchy, some 10 people are currently being prosecuted on lese majeste charges, at least two are in prison, and more held without bail.
This situation has gone unresolved far too long.
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27th April
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Freedom Against Censorship in Thailand website blocked
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Based on article
from prachatai.net
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Two ISPs, TOT ADSL and Buddy Broadband along with Kasetsart University have been blocking Freedom Against Censorship in Thailand (FACT)
since at least noon on April 25.
The fact that three networks are now blocking the FACT site indicates that the blocking order did, in fact, come from MICT and is not just an ISP decision.
This means that probably more ISPs will start to block FACT as the MICT request is implemented by them. Some may be inefficient and not get around to blocking; others may simply ignore MICT’s request.
Freedom Against Censorship Thailand (FACT) has prepared a formal letter of complaint to send to Ranongruk Suwanachee, ICT minister, and the CEOs of the three ISPs.
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26th April
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Thai government lifts their block on opposition websites leaving just 9,000 sites blocked
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Based on article
from prachatai.net
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On Apr 24, the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology sent an e-mail to inform internet service providers (ISPs) of its unblocking of red-shirted websites, noting the situation has returned to normal.
Aree Jiworarak, the Director of MICT's Information Technology Supervision Office, said in the e-mail that the Emergency Decree had now been lifted, and the situation had returned to normal, so ISPs and concerned persons could lift the blocking of the
websites.
However, he said that ISPs should advise their clients that there were still other laws in place, and they should take into consideration good conscience and social responsibility in doing their jobs. He thanked ISPs and concerned persons for having
cooperated or attempting to cooperate when unable to do so for business reasons. He hoped that in future difficult times, they would cooperate and serve the country yet again.
Situation Normal
Based on article
from facthai.wordpress.com
The Thai internet censors at MICT are currently blocking 6,218 websites 'affecting national security' which includes lese majeste, 2,307 pornographic websites and 430 gambling websites, admitting to 8,955 blocked websites.
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26th April
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An interview with a Singaporean film censor
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Based on article
from channelnewsasia.com
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Singapore's reviled censors call themselves the Board of Film Censors (BFC). At the Media Development Authority I spoke with film classifier Dinesh Pasrasurum.
Movie ratings — which range from G (for general entertainment) to R21 (restricted to those 21 years and above) — that has put the censors in the line of fire of everyone from irate cineastes who discover they’re literally not getting the complete picture
to conservative moralists who kick up a fuss about movies with questionable themes.
While you don’t really need the entire group to give a stamp of approval for Finding Nemo, in cases dealing with touchy subjects such as race, religion, sex, homosexuality and vicious violence, it seems like there’s an awful lot of bureaucratic
consultation going on.
For potentially tricky flicks, the BFC asks the opinions of the Films Consultative Panel, a 60-member group of folks ranging from housewives to lawyers and doctors. They may also decide to consult certain focus groups or ethnic groups. There’s also a
Films Appeal Committee, should a distributor feel unhappy about the rating they end up with.
But there’s a difference between commercial films and ones slated for festivals. Take the case of the on-going Singapore International Film Festival (SIFF). Its history is chockfull of some of the region’s best directors is also dotted with clashes with
censors. This year is no exception. The BFC has banned two films: The Berlin Festival-awarded Shahida , a documentary about female suicide bombers by Natalie Asouline, and the gay coming-of-age story Boy by Filipino Aureaus Solito, whose
film The Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros was released commercially here. Four other films garnered an R21 rating with proposed cuts, but because the festival has a (justified) policy of showing only uncut films, organisers have also pulled them.
According to the BFC, only four films (or 0.5 per cent) were banned in Singapore last year. Compared to the United Kingdom rating of 18, the SIFF film Klass was given an NC16.
The Passion of the Christ got an 18 rating both here and in the UK. Milk , however, was rated R21 in Singapore, R (those under 17 require an accompanying parent or adult guardian) in the United States, and only 15 in the UK.
When asked why violence seems to be more acceptable than sexual issues (both hetero and homosexual ones) in movies, Dinesh said: The cue we’re getting from the community is that in terms of sexuality — or homosexuality, for that matter — the community
is very conservative at the moment. You could say society’s tolerance for violence and coarse language (is higher). But as society progresses and becomes more relaxed with regards to (the former), so will we.
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24th April
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South Korea financial blogger cleared of damaging public interest
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Based on article
from news.bbc.co.uk
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A South Korean blogger accused of spreading false information on the internet has walked free from court.
Park Dae-sung, better known as Minerva, built up a huge online following by making largely negative - and accurate - predictions on the economy.
Prosecutors said his brand of financial journalism was damaging to the public interest - but a Seoul court ruled there was no proof of malicious intent. He is now free to continue his blog.
Minerva served up some uncannily accurate online predictions, including the collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers. He became a blogging sensation, with intense speculation about his true identity - a learned professor perhaps, or maybe an
experienced market trader? The authorities were less impressed, arguing that much of what he wrote was misleading and beginning to affect the money markets.
When they finally tracked him down in January they found the unemployed man picking up his financial know-how by surfing the web and reading mail-order text books.
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24th April
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Thai government moves to suppress media
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See article
from indexoncensorship.org
by Sinfah Tunsarawuth
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Following the anti-government protests, the Thai government has begun to crack down on the opposition media. Will the heavy-handed tactics will incite further chaos?
Radio and television stations in Thailand have been warned by authorities against airing anti-government criticism that could cause civil unrest. Satit Wonghnongtaey, who is in charge of government’s media policy, told reporters that the government
needed to shut down these media, suggesting they had been used to incite unrest in the country.
Opposition websites have also become a target. Thai Netizen Network (TNN), an Internet freedom campaign group, said in a statement on Tuesday that the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology has blocked 66 ‘political websites that aired
views different from those in power’ since 18 April.
...Read full article
On the Political Crisis and Information Censorship
See article
from prachatai.net
Thai Netizen Network (TNN) would like to express our deepest regret with regard to the political conflict that intensified until it led to the loss of lives and properties, and the government's enforcement of the Emergency Decree on Government
Administration In States of Emergency B.E. 2548, which infringes upon citizens' rights and freedoms by controlling Internet media.
The government has blocked numerous websites that offer viewpoints that differ from those in power, pursuant to news report that the ICT Ministry has ordered censorship of over 60 websites.
...Read full article
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23rd April
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Chinese authorities target copy DVD sellers dealing in porn
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Thanks to Nick
Based on article
from pcworld.com
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China has detained or sentenced nearly 30 people in recent months after seizing hundreds of thousands of audiovisual discs, some containing pornography, a government censorship agency has said.
The crackdown appeared aimed at eradicating porn more than copyright infringement, though pirated DVDs, software and books are sold at many stalls and street corners around China. It follows a government campaign against online pornography launched in
January that has seen dozens of arrests and over 2,000 Web sites closed.
Thirteen people have been sentenced this year on charges of copyright violations or selling obscene materials, according to a statement on the Web site of China's General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP). The people were given prison terms
of up to seven years and fined as much as 105,000 yuan (US$15,400) each, the GAPP said.
GAPP suggested the agency's goal was to target porn rather than intellectual property violations. The agency urged following through on such cases to deter the spread of porn in China.
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22nd April
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Zack and Miri can't make a porno in Thailand
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Based on article
from nationmultimedia.com
The uncut region 2 DVD is available at UK Amazon
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The Thai film censors have banned the US comedy: Zack and Miri Make a Porno
The screening of this film may encourage copycats here, Thai Culture Ministry permanent secretary Vira Rojpojchanarat claimed.
The film's distributor, M Pictures, argued that Zack and Miri Make a Porno was a satirical take on contemporary US society and was suitable for viewers aged over 18.
When the National Film Board decided to ban the film during its meeting on Monday, M Pictures appealed and a panel was set up to review the board's ruling.
After viewing the film, the panel upheld the decision to ban Zack and Miri Make a Porno from Thai screens.
The film is rated as 18 for adults only in the UK and R in the US meaning that children can view at cinema only if accompanied by responsible adults.
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19th April
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Vietnam magazine banned for praising anti-China demonstrators
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Based on article
from news.bbc.co.uk
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A newspaper in Vietnam has been banned for three months for publishing controversial articles on China.
The Ministry of Information and Communication decided to suspend the Du lich (Tourism) bi-weekly for serious violations of Vietnamese Press Law.
Du lich ran a number of articles criticising China over territorial disputes between Vietnam and China. A story written by Trung Bao praised the courageous spirit of those who participated in anti-China demonstrations in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh last
year. Thousands of people joined the protests against the Chinese government's policies in the South China Sea.
The paper was accused of writing untruthful information and inciting violence, causing hatred between nations - charges that Du lich's deputy editor-in-chief denied.
The Ministry of Information said it would consider reshuffling the paper's editorial leadership in order to improve its management.
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18th April
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Samoa censor bans the award winning film Milk
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Based on article
from lezgetreal.com
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The Samoa Censor Board has banned the movie Milk from playing in Samoa
The movie is based on the life of gay activist Harvey Milk, and was rejected by the Censor Board after it was presented by one of the local movie stores for approval.
Principal Censor Leiataua Niuapu Faaui confirmed the board had rejected the application, and the movie would not be distributed in movie stores in Samoa. He declined to give a reason.
Eteuati Junior Esau, General Manager of Movies4U, the largest chain of movie stores in the country said: I really just want a reason why, because my customers are demanding this movie.
Esau says he does not understand why the movie has been banned, since it had great reviews, won numerous awards and is based on a true story.
Ken Moala, a well known Human Rights Activist in Samoa, says banning the movie is uncalled for: I do not think it should be banned. It is basically a documentary about the human endeavour to conquer something that people tend to discriminate against.
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17th April
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Police raid radio and TV stations supporting Thaksin
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Based on article
from bangkokpost.com
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The Thai government has begun forcibly dismantling red shirt networks by raiding and closing down community radio stations.
Police raided the pro-Thaksin DStation in Bangkok and, in central Chiang Mai, police raided a community radio station operated by the anti-government Rak Chiang Mai 51, which is known to support former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra.
Police seized transmission equipment against a backdrop of angry protests by more than 200 red shirts who gathered outside the hotel. Chiang Mai provincial police chief Sommai Kongwisaisuk said the station was told to stop broadcasting after 6pm on
Monday.
Provincial branches of the Internal Security Operations Command (Isoc) also asked community radio operators not to use their stations to incite unrest.
In Udon Thani, police raided a pro-Thaksin community radio station run by the Khon Rak Udon group. Police seized transmission equipment. Wachira Khamsueb, a radio host, was charged with operating radio equipment without a licence and released on bail.
More than 100 members of the Khon Rak Udon group turned up at the police station to protest the police action.
A team of 30 police officers raided DStation, the satellite TV station run by the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship, based in Bangkok. The UDD used DStation to broadcast protest activities and air Thaksin's speeches.
Troops seized control of the Thaicom satellite station in Lat Lum Kaew, Pathum Thani, used by DStation to broadcast reports to UDD supporters in Bangkok and around the country.
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17th April
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More self censorship of The Economist magazine in Thailand
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Based on article
from bangkokbugle.com
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The Economist has again decided not to distribute its magazine in Thailand this week because of coverage of the Thai monarchy.
In an email to subscribers the magazine confirmed: Due to the sensitive nature of our coverage on the Thai monarchy, we decided not to distribute the April 18th 2009 issue of The Economist in Thailand.
This week's magazine appears to have two Thailand related articles although the sensitive article is entitled The trouble with Thailand's King . It is sure to thrust Thailand's lese majeste laws into the global spotlight once again.
This is the third edition of the magazine this year to suffer distribution problems this year.
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17th April
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Vietnam bans nude art exhibition
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Based on article
from straitstimes.com
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Authorities in Vietnam have refused to allow an exhibition of nude paintings because they are inappropriate for the society.
The Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism in the central city of Hue refused a licence for painter Nguyen Kim Dinh to exhibit 12 nude paintings, the VietNamNet news website said.
His exhibit was approved by the Thua Thien-Hue provincial art association but Hue's culture department then ruled that some of the paintings don't meet artistic standards and are inappropriate to Vietnamese habits and custom.
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16th April
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Pakistan censors raid cinemas showing 'vulgar' films
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Based on article
from dailytimes.com.pk
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Pakistan Film and Censor Board Chairman Barrister Shahnawaz Noon has sealed two cinemas supposedly showing vulgar movies.
A seven-member team of the board, assisted by local police, raided Shabistan and Motti Mehal Cinemas and found that they were showing vulgar English movies.
Shahnawaz Noon said: The team found that Shabistan and Motti Mehal Cinemas were showing vulgar movies. Hence, their machinery was taken into board’s custody and they were sealed till next order. He said administration of the cinemas managed to
escape and investigations are underway.
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15th April
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Police censors move into the newsrooms of Fiji
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12th April 2009. Based on article
from thaindian.com
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Police officers raided the newsrooms of several publications in Fiji on Saturday to censor current and past news reporting, BNO News has learned. The move comes just hours after the president imposed an emergency rule which limits freedom of speech and
gave police expanded powers.
Police officers [are] here at our newsroom, checking what we have reported and what we [are] yet to report on, a journalist for a publication in Fiji told BNO News on Saturday: Police officers in Fiji have been dispatched in teams to various
local newsrooms to censor items that have been published and yet to be published, particularly by newspapers.
A local television [station] got two news items pulled out of their news segment, a local newspaper we understand had 56 pulled out, the journalist said. The emergency regulation decree, which was announced by President Iloilo on Saturday, states,
among other rules, that media organizations must submit any material to the government before it is allowed to be published.
Update: Last Foreign Journalist Deported
13th April 2009. Based on article
from stuff.co.nz
One of the last foreign journalists left in Fiji is facing deportation as the military regime there tightens its control. Australian Broadcasting Corporation Pacific correspondent Sean Dorney told Stuff that he had been called to the Ministry of
Information and told they did not like his reporting. He was asked to voluntarily leave Suva but declined, saying he had a valid visa.
He returned to his hotel and while he was talking to Stuff he received a phone call from the Ministry asking him report to them: I've no idea what they're doing now, it looks like deportation .
Dorney believes he is being deported because he reported on how the local media responded to the censorship. Fiji TV has refused to air a censored bulletin and newspaper the Fiji Times has run blanks where stories had been censored.
Update: No Political News Reported
15th April 2009. Based on article
from guardian.co.uk
The authorities called in Fiji Sun publisher Peter Lomas and senior journalist Maika Bolatiki. It is believed the meeting was to do with the newspaper's extraordinary front page statement, We ban politics in which Lomas announced that the paper would no
longer publish political stories of any kind.
The Fiji Times has also refused to publish any political stories, and the national television station Fiji One has reportedly done the same.
Three senior News Ltd executives were also summoned to the information ministry - managing director Anne Fussell, editor-in-chief Netani Rika and company lawyer Richard Naidu - to explain why the papers ran blanks on their pages (to show that stories
have been spiked due to censorship).
Update: Radio Off Air
15th April 2009. Based on article
from brisbanetimes.com.au
Frank Bainimarama's military regime is forcing ABC to shut down its radio transmitters in Fiji to limit negative reports about the government's undemocratic rule.
The broadcaster says it has been ordered to close its FM relay stations in the capital, Suva, and in the tourist town of Nadi.
Local sources have since confirmed Radio Australia is off the air in both locations, ABC said. However, it is still able to broadcast in the troubled country on its shortwave transmitter.
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15th April
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Web forum moderator faces 50 years for not deleting posts quickly enough
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Based on article
from facthai.wordpress.com
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Chiranuch Premchaiporn, webmaster of independent Thai online news portal Prachatai, was arrested March 6 under Thailand’s Computer Crimes Act. Her charges resulted from allowing comments posted by readers of Prachatai’s online discussion fora alleged to
be lèse majesté.
On April 7, Chiranuch was called to Royal Thai Police headquarters for further investigation. Thai police laid nine new charges against Chiranuch resulting from the information she herself gave them after her arrest.
Police claim the alleged illegal postings were allowed to remain on Prachatai for periods of one to fifteen days. Police consider each posting to be a separate violation of the computer law even though these were removed promptly after notification by
Thailand’s ICT ministry.
None of the webboard posters have been arrested possibly as it is beyond the data retention period when IP addresses can be traced.
Additional charges under the cybercrime law mean that Chiranuch is facing 50 years in prison for comments she did not create and not self-censoring webboard posts fast enough for government censors.
Police also told Chiranuch that six more persons will be charged later this month under the computer act.
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14th April
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Google bans South Korean YouTube contributions
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Thanks to Nick
Based on article
from macworld.co.uk
|
Google has disabled user uploads and comments on the Korean version of its YouTube video portal in reaction to a new law that requires the real name of a contributor be listed along each contribution they make.
The rules, part of a Cyber Defamation Law, came into effect on April 1 for all sites with over 100,000 unique visitors per day. It requires that users provide their real name and national ID card number.
In response to the requirements Google has stopped users from uploading via its Korean portal rather than start a new registration system.
We have a bias in favor of freedom of expression and are committed to openness, said Lucinda Barlow, a spokeswoman for YouTube in Asia: It's very important that if users want to be anonymous that they have that chance.
But while the move obeys the letter of the law it skirts around the spirit of it by allowing users based in South Korea to continue uploading and commenting on YouTube by switching their preference setting to a country other than Korea.
YouTube noted this work-around on its Korean Web site and any videos and comments contributed this way will still be seen by Internet users in the country.
The new law was rushed into force after the suicide of a popular actress in October focused attention on the problem of online bullying in the highly-connected country.
Already many major Korean portals and Web sites require users to provide their national ID card number when registering accounts.
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9th April
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China has a downer on Ultraman
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Based on article
from advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
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According to chinaz.com's webmaster report, one of the most famous animation website kaicn.com had recently been shut down. Kai.com had been well known for its rich Japanese animation contents.
Coincidentally, a few days later (early April), Premier Wen Jiaobo visited an animation production lab in Wubei province and made a comment that my grandson loves animation, but his selection is usually Ultraman (Japanese animation), he should watch
more of Chinese animation production.
According to Chinese news agency report, Wen's comment quickly echoed by netizens over the country, many supported banning and boycotting of Japanese animation Ultraman.
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9th April
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Child internet restrictions introduced in Japan
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Based on article
from search.japantimes.co.jp
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The Japanese Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry has made public a program to promote a safe Internet environment. It lists measures the central and local governments and enterprises must carry out by the end of fiscal 2011.
Among other things, they must effectively cope with information on the Internet that is harmful to children and intrudes on individual privacy.
On April 1, the law to restrict the Internet environment for users under the age of 18 went into effect. In principle, Web sites deemed harmful or inappropriate to children will be filtered. But parents can use their judgment to remove the filters.
In preparation for the law's enforcement, the government program called for promotion of the use of filters to block children's access via mobile phones and personal computers to Web sites that are deemed harmful or inappropriate. It also called for
development of filtering services aimed at different age groups and development of functions parents can use to decide which Web sites or categories of Web sites should be filtered. It also called for examining the effectiveness of Internet service
providers' blocking access to Web sites featuring child pornography.
Third-party organizations will certify Web sites as harmless or "R18" indicating the Web site is harmful to children under 18.
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7th April
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Malaysian government whinge at porn access at cyber cafes
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Based on article
from thestar.com.my
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Access to pornographic and other unhealthy websites at public places such as cyber cafes and premises with WiFi should be banned, said MCA treasurer-general Senator Tan Sri Tee Hock Seng.
The Federal Territory MCA chairman suggested that enforcement authorities be empowered to impose punitive measures on operators of these places: For instance, fine them if their customers are found surfing banned sites.
Tee also urged parents to monitor their children’s use of computers: Many children have computers in their room. Parents should check what sites their children are surfing.
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4th April
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Than internet user jailed for 10 years for posting insulting pictures of king
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Based on article
from news.bbc.co.uk
|
A Thai internet user has been sentenced to 10 years in jail for violating strict laws against insulting the monarchy.
A court in Bangkok said Suwicha Thakho digitally altered images of King Bhumibol Adulyadej and his family and posted them on the internet.
The court did not say how the pictures were changed or where they appeared, but local media cited YouTube.
Thailand's royal family is sheltered from public debate by some of the world's most stringent lese-majeste laws, as the police and army try to suppress what they fear is a rising tide of anti-monarchy sentiment.
Now up to 7000 blocked pages or websites
Based on article
from prachatai.com
On April 1st, Aree Jiworarak, of the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, said the Ministry's recently established Internet Security Operations Centre (ISOC) had blocked over 7,000 improper URLs or web pages, which included 1,403
culturally and morally offensive pornographic pages.
Now the Ministry is investigating the case of the pornographic animation clip Ninja Love which was posted at mthai website, and is trying to find the poster for prosecution.
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4th April
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China issues detailed rules for video sharing sites
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Based on article
from advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org
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Although Youtube has been unblocked, the China administration is determined to control audio and video content circulated in the Internet.
On March 30, the State Administration of Radio Film and Television (SARFT) issued an administrative notice, Concerning the tightening of management on Internet audio-visual content, In the notice that the following content should be banned from
the Internet:
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against constitutional principle
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damaging to national unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity
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disclosure of state secret, harmful to state security, national honor and interest
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inciting ethic hatred, ethic discrimination, undermining ethic unity, culture and custom
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promoting cults and superstition
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disrupting social order and social stability
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inducing underage youth to commit crime; rendering violence, pornography, gambling and terrorist activities
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humiliating and slandering contents that violate citizen's privacy and rights
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harmful to social morale and national culture and tradition
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other contents that prohibited by other laws and regulations.
Internet audio-visual content providers have to edit and delete the following content:
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maliciously distorting Chinese culture, history and historical fact; maliciously distorting other countries' history and disrespectful to human civilization and other countries' civilization and customs
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deliberately ridiculing revolution leaders, heroic figures, significant historical figures, prominent figures inside and outside China
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maliciously ridiculing people's army, armed police, police, and judicial bodies; contents that show physical abuse and torturing of prisoners and criminals
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showing the arrogant and heroic side of criminal acts, details of crimes and investigation, image and voice of witnesses and whistle blowers
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advocating religious extremism, creating conflicts among different religions, sects, believers and non-believers that hurt people's feeling
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promoting fortune telling, fung-shui, exorcism treatment and other superstitious acts
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depicting nature disasters, accidents, terrorist acts, wars and disasters in a spoofing manner
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explicitly presenting promiscuity, rape, incest, necrophilia, prostitution, sexual perversion, masturbation and other similar acts
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showing or implicitly presenting sexual behavior and bodily intimacy
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deliberately exhibiting private parts of human bodies that covered up by body parts or small objects
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inducing sexual fantasy
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advocating unhealthy acts of extra marital sex, polygamy, one night stand, SM, exchanging partners, and etc
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titled and tagged with seductive words or pictures that associated with adult films, pornographic movies, AV, hidden video, nipple slip, and etc
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agitating content related with homicide, extreme violence, abduction, drug, gambling, and supernatural phenomena
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excessive horrible image, subtitle, background music and sound effects
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demonstrating slaughtering of animals, and human consumption (eating) of protected animal species
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violating individual privacy
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positive presentation or presentation that encourage fight, humiliation and vulgar languages
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advocating negative and decadent life style, world view and value; exaggerating national backwardness and dark side of the society
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video clips that have been banned by SARFT
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violating the principle of relevant laws and regulations.
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3rd April
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Singapore censors ban macho dancer film
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Based on article
from pep.ph
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Boy , the new film of Aureaus Solito, the famed director of the critically-acclaimed indie films Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros and Pisay , was banned by the censors of Singapore.
In his Facebook notes, Solito said the Singapore censors would not allow his new film to be screened.
Solito said Boy is his ode to a phenomenon in Filipino movies, the macho dancer genre. In the film, an unnamed boy is smitten by a macho dancer—or male stripper—and decides to bring him home for the New Year.
It's like a cross between a coming-of-age film and an erotic one and it was supposed to have its premiere in competition at the Singapore International film Festival, which opens on April 14. A week ago, I was so happy to see the Festival had put the
film on their website. And now suddenly it has been banned, said the filmmaker.
He continued: I am still waiting for the censor's statement on my film, but I predict it will have something to do with its gay erotic nature. Zhang Wenjie proposed that it remain in competition, just the jury to watch it. I replied that I make my
films for my audience, not for a jury, and withdrew it from the Festival.
After his film Boy was banned by the censors in Singapore, Solito decided not to go through the MTRCB here at home. Boy will be screened for a public audience in the censorship-free UP Film Institute and the Cultural Center of the Philippines.
I have had enough of being censored, ended Solito.
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2nd April
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The latest amongst a dozen cases of lese majeste
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Based on article
from bloomberg.com
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Suwicha Thakhor has spent two months in a Thai prison, accused by police of insulting the royal family. He says he should be allowed to express an opinion.
Arrested Jan. 14 and charged in connection with material posted on the Internet, the 34-year-old oil engineer said: We have to be able to think freely. They cannot stop ideas by sending people to jail.
More than a dozen similar cases are pending under Thai law as a widening political divide prompts discussion on the future role of the monarchy.
The lese-majeste law is no different from contempt-of- court laws where you protect institutions that are neutral, that have no self-defense mechanism, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva claimed, he told reporters the law would be reviewed to make
it clearer.
Suwicha, wearing a prison-issued yellow shirt emblazoned with a royal insignia, said his views on the monarchy changed after the coup that deposed Thaksin. Police tracked his Web postings, which he wouldn’t discuss, and read his e-mails, he said. He was
arrested after dropping his kids off at school.
In the past, people fled to the jungle to share their political beliefs, Suwicha said, referring to a Communist insurgency in the 1970s that was suppressed by the government: Now we have Web sites. If they want to stop it, they must stop the
technology itself.
Suwicha, who has twice been denied bail, said he’s hoping for a miracle. If freed, he plans to work on a farm and live a private life. Still, he makes no apologies for his beliefs.
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2nd April
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Police seize political DVDs on grounds of a lack of film censor certificate
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Based on article
from chinapost.com.tw
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Malaysian police have seized DVDs used by the opposition to campaign for upcoming special elections, heightening fears of a crackdown on political dissent.
The April 7 balloting to fill three legislative seats is being fiercely contested because the results will be considered a barometer of public support for the incoming prime minister and other newly elected ruling party leaders.
Police seized 30 DVDs at an opposition campaign rally and briefly detained an opposition official late Sunday in northern Perak state, said Ngeh Koo Ham, a Perak opposition lawmaker.
Opposition leader Lim Kit Siang said the action was the latest example of the increasing intolerance toward fundamental liberties like freedom of speech, thought and expression in Najib's Malaysia.
The DVD showed clips of opposition lawmakers being barred from holding a meeting at the Perak state legislature after the National Front wrested control of the state administration from the People's Alliance.
District police chief Azisman Alias denied any political motivation, saying the government's film censorship board has not approved the DVDs for public distribution.
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