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PEN Free Voices:  Freedom of Expression in a Time of Complacency

What does it mean to have restraints on freedom of expression? What does it mean to be a writer and reader in a human rights framework? Writer and journalist Antony Loewenstein, co-editor of Left Turn and author of The Blogging Revolution, explores the meaning of PEN’s cornerstone belief: freedom to write, freedom to read.

ANTONY LOEWENSTEIN is a freelance journalist, author and blogger. His bestselling book on the Israel/Palestine conflict, My Israel Question, was shortlisted for the 2007 New South Wales Premier’s Literary Award and this was followed by The Blogging Revolution, both titles now in translation. He is co-editor, with Jeff Sparrow, of Left Turn, and is working on a book about disaster capitalism. Antony is a research associate at the University of Technology, Sydney’s Australian Centre for Independent Journalism.

Date: Wednesday 20 June 2012
Time: 6.30 PM – 7.30 PM
Cost: Free
Venue: Old Council Chambers, Trades Hall, Lygon St Carlton

Presented by Sydney PEN in association with Melbourne PEN as part of the Free Voices series, with funds kindly granted by Copyright Agency Limited (CAL).

 

“The Internet is uncontrollable. And if the Internet is uncontrollable, freedom will win. It’s as simple as that.” Ai Weiwei, Guardian April 2012.

May 3rd is designated annually as Press Freedom Day by UNESCO, and marked worldwide by professional media organizations, NGOs and human rights activists, and states.

This year, PEN International is celebrating the rights of all citizens on Press Freedom Day. As always, we champion the rights of media organizations and journalists to safe, uncensored reporting and publication and pay tribute to those who have been killed and disappeared. But we celebrate especially the rights of all citizens to untrammelled access to information and truth; as set out in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, “the freedom to hold opinions and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

These rights are persistently denied by repressive regimes often in collusion, implicit or otherwise, with powerful non-state players. In the past year, we’ve witnessed countless examples of such persecution, and to an overwhelming degree, digital media plays a crucible role, simultaneously the instrument of sharing news and knowledge and the instrument of persecution and surveillance. In 2012, two of UNESCO’s themes for Press Freedom Day are Media Freedom has The Power to Transform Societies and Difficulty in The Access to Quality Information Undermines Media Freedom. These themes are joined in the digital media theatre. Non-state players, notably compliant technology companies, play a reprehensible supporting role.
China’s War on Weibo (China’s Twitter) is waged with words themselves as weapons; the government mounts search-and-destroy missions using a scattershot of keywords to obliterate reference to subjects it doesn’t want people to write about or know about. Two remarkable examples in the past year of the clash between the public’s freedom to know and the government’s urge to control: the collision of two high-speed trains in Zhejiang Province after which Chinese citizens posted 25 million messages in five days critical of the government; and the recent downfall of disgraced communist party leader Bo Xilai. The government also uses digital media for surveillance of thousands of Chinese citizens, dissidents and others; surveillance is done through the monitoring of cell phones and computers, email accounts, and extends to the use of 24/7 video cameras outside the entrances to private houses, and even the building of a guard hut opposite someone’s front door.

In Bahrain, cruder tools are used: the almost idiosyncratic blocking of websites that might be of interest to citizens and activists; the insidious trolls who track the Twitter accounts of activists (in Bahrain and beyond) to harass and denigrate those individuals. (Government officials joke about having to use proxy sites themselves to track criticism of the regime.) Despite government measures, as in many other MENA countries this past year, Bahraini activists provide nonstop, 24/7 news service to each other and the world using social media. The online campaign has become increasingly sophisticated and creative as dissent accelerates.

In both China and Bahrain, as in many other countries, the use of digital media, to convey news, opinions, evidence of wrongdoing, can have terrible consequences, including extrajudicial killing, torture, detention and forced exile. In many countries, bloggers and citizen journalists are the most vulnerable of all; they work without the protection of professional training and media organizations.

So on May 3rd this year, PEN champions the rights of all people to freedom of expression in digital media. We’re currently working on the PEN International Digital Media Declaration, which, once approved by PEN centres, will form the basis for campaigning worldwide. Here are some of the principles we’re working on:

      All persons have the right to express themselves freely through digital media without fear of reprisal or persecution.

 

      All persons have the right to seek and receive information through digital media.

 

      All persons have the right to be free from government surveillance of digital media.

 

      The private sector, and technology companies in particular, are bound by the right to freedom of expression and human rights.

 

    The message remains the same; it’s only the medium that changes.

Marian Botsford Fraser,
Chair, Writers in Prison Committee
PEN International

 

Speakers

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Michael Gawenda

Michael Gawenda is a former editor in chief ofThe Age. He is a Walkley Award winning journalist, columnist and former foreign correspondent.

 

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Catherine Deveny

Catherine Deveny is a comedy writer, columnist, stand-up comedian and the author of Free to a Good HomeSay When and It’s Not My Fault They Print Them.

 
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Julian Burnside

Julian Burnside, QC, is an Australian barrister who specialises in commercial litigation and is also deeply involved in human rights work, in particular in relation to refugees.

 

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Simon Longstaff

Dr Simon Longstaff is Executive Director of St James Ethics Centre and chairs the Intelligence Squared debates in Sydney and Melbourne.

 

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Marcia Langton

Professor Marcia Langton AM holds the Chair of Australian Indigenous Studies at the University of Melbourne.

 

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Gretel Killeen

Gretel Killeen is a writer, performer, voice artist and journalist. She is currently completing her directorial feature film debut.

 

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Arnold Zable

Arnold Zable is a writer, novelist and human rights advocate, and one of Australia’s most-loved storytellers.

 

Chair:

Dr Simon Longstaff has a PhD in Philosophy from Cambridge. Prior to becoming the inaugural Executive Director of St James Ethics Centre in 1991, Dr Longstaff worked in the Northern Territory in the Safety Department of BHP subsidiary, GEMCO, lectured at Cambridge University and consulted to the Cambridge Commonwealth and Overseas Trusts. His book Hard Cases, Tough Choices was published in 1997. Dr Longstaff was inaugural President of the Australian Association for Professional & Applied Ethics and is a Fellow of the World Economic Forum. He is Chairman of Woolworths Limited Corporate Responsibility Panel and AMP Capital Socially Responsible Investment Advisory Committee and serves as Member on a number of Board Committees.

Tickets $20 and $12

Book here

Intelligence Squared Debates: Freedom of Speech is Over-Rated

Melbourne Town Hall, 6:30PM – 8:30PM, Tuesday 08 May 2012

 
The upcoming Intelligence Squared debate at the Wheeler Centre has the theme ‘Freedom of Speech is Overrated’.

PEN Melbourne’s President Arnold Zable will be one of the speakers, along with an extraordinary team of debaters including Marcia Langton, Julian Burnside and Michael Gawenda.

Arnold will be arguing the case based on PEN  International’s work on behalf of persecuted writers. One of his arguments will be that as longstanding members of PEN, we know that not only is freedom of speech under-rated in all too many countries, but it is often held in contempt with disastrous and at times tragic consequences for writers.


Tuesday 8 May, 6.30-8.30pm at Melbourne Town Hall.

Bookings can be made directly via the Wheeler Centre website http://wheelercentre.com/calendar/program/intelligence-squared-debates/

 

 

New York City, April 12, 2012—PEN American Center today named Eskinder Nega, a journalist and dissident blogger in Ethiopia, as the recipient of its 2012 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award. Nega, a leading advocate for press freedom and freedom of expression in Ethiopia, was arrested on September 14, 2011, and is currently being tried under the country’s sweeping anti-terror legislation, which criminalizes any reporting deemed to “encourage” or “provide moral support” to groups and causes which the government considers to be “terrorist.” He could face the death penalty if convicted.

The award, which honors international writers who have been persecuted or imprisoned for exercising or defending the right to freedom of expression, will be presented at PEN’s Annual Gala on May 1, 2012, at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

“The Ethiopian writer Eskinder Nega is that bravest and most admirable of writers, one who picked up his pen to write things that he knew would surely put him at grave risk,” said Peter Godwin, president of PEN American Center. “Yet he did so nonetheless. And indeed he fell victim to exactly the measures he was highlighting, Ethiopia’s draconian ‘’anti terrorism’ laws that criminalize critical commentary. This is at least the seventh time that the government of Meles Zenawi has detained Eskinder Nega in an effort to muzzle him. Yet Nega has continued his spirited pursuit of freedom of expression. Such humbling courage makes Nega a hugely deserving recipient of the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award.”

Eskinder Nega has been publishing articles critical of the government since 1993, when he opened his first newspaper, Ethiopis, which was soon shut down by authorities. He was the general manager of Serkalem Publishing House, which published the newspapers Asqual,Satenaw, and Menelik, all of which are now banned in Ethiopia. He has also been a columnist for the monthly magazine Change and for the U.S.-based news forum EthioMedia, which are also banned. He has been detained at least seven times under Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, including in 2005, when he and his journalist wife Serkalem Fasil were imprisoned for 17 months on treason charges for their critical reporting on the government’s violent crackdown of protests following disputed elections, and briefly in February 2011 for “attempts to incite Egyptian and Tunisian-like protests in Ethiopia” after he published articles on the Arab Spring. Their newspapers have been shut down and Nega has been denied a license to practice journalism since 2005, yet he has continued to publish columns critical of the government’s human rights record and calling for an end to political repression and corruption.

Nega was again arrested on September 14, 2011, after he published a column questioning the government’s claim that a number of journalists it had detained were suspected terrorists, and for criticizing the arrest of well-known Ethiopian actor and government critic Debebe Eshetu on terror charges earlier that week. Shortly after his arrest, Nega was charged with affiliation with the banned political party Ginbot 7, which the Ethiopian government considers a terrorist organization. On November 10, Nega was charged and further accused of plotting with and receiving weapons and explosives from neighboring Eritrea to carry out terrorist attacks in Ethiopia. State television portrayed Nega and other political prisoners as “spies for foreign forces.” He is currently being held in Maekelawi Prison in Addis Ababa, where detainees are reportedly often ill-treated and tortured.

PEN, Human Rights Watch, the Committee to Protect Journalists, and many other international organizations have long been concerned about Ethiopia’s use of anti-terrorism legislation to justify the jailing of journalists and members of the political opposition. Eskinder Nega’s trial on charges under the 2009 Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, which covers the “planning preparation, conspiracy, incitement, and attempt” of terrorist acts, illustrates this trend. During his trial, which opened on March 6, 2012, the prosecution has presented evidence that consisted of nearly inaudible recordings of telephone conversations and other comments and a video of a town hall meeting in which Nega discusses the differences between Arab countries and Ethiopia. Nega took the stand on March 28 and denied all charges against him, saying he has never conspired to overthrow the government through violence and admitting only to reporting on the Arab Spring and speculating on whether a similar movement could take place in Ethiopia. Serkalem Fasil, who was the recipient of the 2007 Courage in Journalism Award from the International Women’s Media Foundation, maintained that her husband is “a journalist, not a member of a political party.”

In announcing the award today in New York, Freedom to Write Program Director Larry Siems praised Eskinder Nega’s “courageous use of the written word to advocate on behalf of his fellow journalists and citizens.”

“Nega’s critiques of the Zenawi government go back two decades, and in recent years he has written fearlessly about the need for peaceful democratic transition and about the fate of other journalists unjustly silenced under the pretense of fighting terrorism,” Siems said. “Now as he faces the same fate, in no small part because he spoke out on their behalf, he continues to press for freedom of expression from behind bars. He is truly an extraordinary individual and we are proud to be able to award him this honor.”

Siems joined Godwin in urging the Obama administration to press Ethiopian authorities to halt the use of anti-terror legislation to target journalists for their legitimate work and release Eskinder Nega, one of the most visible symbols of the Ethiopian government’s persistent press freedom violations, and all other journalists jailed under national security laws in violation of their right to freedom of expression.

Writer, historian and PEN Member Barbara Goldsmith underwrites the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award. This is the 26th year the award has honored an international literary figure who has been persecuted or imprisoned for exercising or defending the right to freedom of expression. Candidates are nominated by PEN International and any of its 145 constituent PEN centers around the world, and screened by PEN American Center and an Advisory Board comprising some of the most distinguished experts in the field. The Advisory Board for the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award includes Carroll Bogert, Deputy Executive Director for External Relations at Human Rights Watch; Vartan Gregorian, President of the Carnegie Corporation; Joanne Leedom-Ackerman, International Vice President of PEN International and PEN American Center Trustee; Aryeh Neier, former president of the Open Society Foundation; and Joel Simon, Executive Director of the Committee to Protect Journalists.

The Freedom to Write Award is an extension of PEN’s year-round advocacy on behalf of the more than 900 writers and journalists who are currently threatened or in prison. Forty-six women and men have received the award since 1987; 33 of the 37 honorees who were in prison at the time they were honored were subsequently released.

Thanks to Christina Ratcliffe, Melbourne PEN, for the link.

 

Over the past few years PEN Melbourne has organised events in collaboration with WISA (Women’s International Solidarity Australia) in support of Malalai Joya. WISA is again hosting a fundraising dinner for Joya in her upcoming visit to Australia on Thursday April12

WISA fundraising dinner with special guest Malalai Joya

Women’s International Solidarity Australia (WISA) welcomes back Malalai Joya for dinner and a discussion to launch WISA’s 2012 Featured Events Series.

Kicking off the series is human rights activist and former Afghan MP Malalai Joya was a featured guest at WISA’s 2010 launch and we welcome her back again in this fundraising dinner. All funds raised will help Joya to continue in her work for human rights and gender justice in Afghanistan. Find out more about Joya’s work on her website http://www.malalaijoya.com/dcmj/

Join us for an evening of delicious food, warm conversation and an insight into Malalai Joya’s incredible work for the people of Afghanistan.

When: Thursday April 12, 6.30pm – 10.00pm

Where: Gurkhas Kitchen, 167 St Georges Road, North Fitzroy

What: Three course Nepalese banquet, vegetarian option available. BYO, no corkage, or alcohol can be purchased on the night.

Price: $50 | $40 conc.

Places are strictly limited so please do RSVP to wisaustralia at g mail dot com

 

Tune into Radio National’s Books and Arts Daily tomorrow at 10am to hear Australian poet and Sydney PEN Writers’ Advisory Panel Member John Tranter read Liu Xiaobo’s poem “You Wait for Me With Dust”, as part of a worldwide reading for the imprisoned Chinese writer and Nobel Laureate. Xiaobo has been in detention for more than three years, since he and other intellectuals wrote and published the civil rights manifesto “Charter 08″. The worldwide reading is meant to make Liu Xiaobo’s work known to a broader public and to support the protest against Liu Xiaobo’s detention in violation of Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

With thanks to Sydney PEN

 

This year, PEN Melbourne’s annual International Women’s Day event features playwright Tracey Rigney, a Wotjobaluk and Ngarrindjeri woman from Victoria and South Australia in conversation with Cynthia Troup.

Tracey Rigney is a storyteller, playwright, screenwriter and director. Cynthia Troup is a writer, researcher and editor based in Melbourne; her plays have been performed at La Mama and Malthouse theatres, and her publications include essays, articles, and interviews in the fields of contemporary music and performance.

Join PEN Melbourne on International Women’s Day for an exploration of Tracey Rigney’s work and readings from her new play, Slow Awakening.

Sunday 18 March 2012 3.00 – 4.00pm
Wheeler Centre
176 Little Lonsdale Street
FREE ENTRY—Bookings at Wheeler Centre

 

PEN International warmly welcomes the Mexican Senate’s approval, on 13 March 2012, of a constitutional amendment, which, if passed by Mexico’s states, will federalize crimes against journalists.
John Ralston Saul, International President of PEN International said:

“This amendment was the focus of our recent delegation to Mexico City, and in particular of our conversation with the President of the Senate and other Senators. Its passage is a very important step in the reforming of Mexican law to make it serve the freedom of expression of Mexican writers and Mexican citizens as a whole.”

PEN International has long campaigned for an end to impunity in Mexico. In January 2012 we sent an international delegation to Mexico City which met with, among others, the President of the Senate, José González Morfín, the then Special Prosecutor for Crimes Against Freedom of Expression, Gustavo Salas, and the Mayor of Mexico City, Marcelo Ebrard.

Mexico is one of the most dangerous countries in the world in which to practise journalism. Since 2000 at least 67 journalists, writers and bloggers have been murdered in connection to their work; at least twelve have disappeared.

One of the key demands made by PEN International during the delegation’s visit was that crimes against journalists and freedom of expression be federalized.
The amendment, if ratified, will modify Article 73 of the Mexican Constitution, giving federal authorities jurisdiction over any crime committed against journalists, persons and organizations which impinges on their right to free expression. In practice, the vast majority of attacks on journalists in Mexico have been dealt with at state level, where corruption and inefficiency is endemic. Handing responsibility to federal authorities will bring greater resources to any investigation; the federal authorities are also considered to be less susceptible to corruption.

Versions of the legislation have been debated since 2008. The amendment now needs to be passed by a majority of the states for it to become law.

 

Download the first PEN Quarterly of 2012

Editor Christine McKenzie
Assistant Editor/Copyeditor Christina C Ratcliffe
Desktop Publishing Lynn Smailes, with thanks to Toya Ricci

 

You will remain an example

I will walk with all walking people

And no

I will not stand still

Just to watch the passers by

This is my Homeland

In which

I have

A palm tree

A drop in a cloud

And a grave to protect me

This is more beautiful

Than all cities of fog

And cities which

Do not recognise me

My master:

I would like to have power

Even for one day

To build the “republic of feelings.”

(Trans. Ghias al-Jundi)

 

Tal al-Malouhi is a young poet who was only 19 years old when she was arrested in her home city of Homs more than two years ago in December 2009. She was sentenced to five years in prison in February 2011, convicted of spying for a foreign country. She is still in prison, with little access to her family – a situation aggravated by the recent conflict. She had no political affiliations but she had published comments and poetry on line. For more on her case read this PEN alert.

 

 

New Matilda writer Austin Mackell faces serious charges in Egypt and is unable to return home. He has received no public support from the Australian Government. This open letter to the PM and Foreign Minister urges action.

http://newmatilda.com/2012/02/24/open-letter-support-austin-mackell

© 2012 Melbourne PEN Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha