Showing posts with label Jean Dominique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jean Dominique. Show all posts

Monday, May 3, 2010

Secretary Clinton's Remarks on World Press Freedom Day

In Jonathan Demme's The Agronomist, a tribute to Jean Dominque Haitian journalist and radio station owner assassinated at his studio 10 years ago, Dominique's widow, Michele Montas, makes a reference to World Press Freedom Day.


You may remember Michele from the Haiti Donors Conference this year where she spoke quite forcefully about Haitian task force's recommendations for rebuilding Haiti. Michele works for the United Nations in Haiti now, but I remember her and Jean as courageous journalists

So, today is World Press Freedom Day and below are the Secretary of State's remarks.

World Press Freedom Day



Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
May 3, 2010


The United States joins the international community in celebrating World Press Freedom Day. A free press is essential to an empowered citizenry, government accountability and responsible economic development. Wherever independent media are under threat, accountable governance and human freedom are undermined.
Courageous journalists across the globe risk their freedom and their lives to provide independent information on government actions and their consequences; report the news from conflict zones; expose crime, corruption and wrongdoing; and reveal human rights violations – all despite efforts, in some cases, by governments and others, to control what people read, hear and think.
For exercising the right to free expression, journalists and bloggers are too often targeted for harassment, intimidation, arrest, physical attack and even murder, often at the hands of unknown assailants who act with impunity. In November 2009, President Obama applauded the efforts of Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez to “empower fellow Cubans to express themselves through the use of technology” and said that her blog “provides the world a unique window into the realities of daily life in Cuba.” That same month she and two fellow bloggers were forcibly detained by plain clothes security personnel while en route to a peaceful demonstration, and she and one of her companions were beaten. Also in 2009, Burmese freelance journalist Hla Hla Win was sentenced to 27 years in prison on trumped-up charges based on nothing more than interviewing monks in commemoration of the Saffron Revolution. And Natalya Estemirova, an independent journalist from Russia who was known for her fearless reporting on human rights violations in Chechnya was kidnapped and murdered. In total, 71 journalists were killed last year, many murdered with impunity.
Governments in every region of the world apply restrictive laws and regulations and other controls on media freedom. These restrictions often extend beyond traditional print and broadcast media to new forms of electronic communications through the Internet and other new technologies. The State Department’s human rights report detailed our concerns about these practices.
Article 19 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights is as relevant in our globalized Information Age as it was when it was adopted over six decades ago: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” The United States is committed to working in partnership with members of the media, the private sector, non-governmental organizations and other concerned governments to defend freedom of expression and the brave journalists who are persecuted for exercising it on the challenging new terrain of the 21st century.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Upcoming: On Hillary Clinton's Agenda

Well, I lack a good many details on some of this, but this will stand as a window into the week until I find more particulars.

As announced here during the past week, Hillary is once again being honored. On Wednesday April 28 (Darn! The night I teach late!) Her Excellency will be honored at Virginia Military Institute (VMI) with their Distinguished Diplomat Award.She will also be speaking at this event.

Secretary Clinton to Deliver Remarks at the Virginia Military Institute and Receive VMI's Distinguished Diplomat Award on April 28



Office of the Spokesman
Washington, DC
April 23, 2010


Secretary Clinton will visit the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) the evening of April 28, 2010. Her remarks will discuss smart power one year later, and how the United States is integrating diplomacy, defense, and development together into its day to day foreign policy. Secretary Clinton will also receive VMI’s Distinguished Diplomat Award.

I find it interesting that a military institute honors diplomats. The partnership between defense and diplomacy is crystallized in that award and reflected in the strong partnership between Secretaries Clinton and Gates. See these letters posted on Thursday last.

Secretary Clinton and Secretary Gates' Letters to the Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee



Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
April 22, 2010


Available at the links below are letters from Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee Kent Conrad, in support of full funding of President Obama’s FY 2011 foreign affairs budget request.

Something else I posted earlier and continue to lack details about, but will mention as a reminder is that at the American Jewish Committee r (AJC) Annual Meeting, both Hillary and Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak will be speaking. According to their website, the meeting is scheduled for April 28-30. I will update as details are made available.

Finally, there is this from yesterday's press briefing.


Philip J. Crowley
Assistant Secretary
Daily Press Briefing
Washington, DC
April 23, 2010

Secretary Clinton Will Open Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference in New York May 3 / White House to Announce Rest of Delegation Next Week

Note to base. May 3 is also the International Day of Freedom of the Press. Just thought I would let you know. I am watching The Agronomist about Jean Dominique, assassinated in 2000 at his radio station (Haiti Inter) in Port-au-Prince. His very brave and fierce widow, Michele Montas, announced that date in the film as I was writing. Check out The Documentary Channel if you have not already.

Shout out to Michele! Remember the night we saw Carrie at Cine Triomphe? They shut down the ticket booth and concession stand during the last five minutes of the movie so that they all could be standing in the back of the room when we all reacted to Carrie's hand coming up through the ashes? I remember seeing you and Jean there that night. Tonight, there is something metaphorical about that scene. Jean Dominique is not dead. His hand arises out of the rubble in Haiti, and his voice echos in yours at the Haiti Donors Conference. You GO girl! We love you! Hugs, Michele!