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IFEX Communiqué Vol 21, No 13

Vol. 21 No. 13 | 28 March 2012 Headlines ________________________________________

International: Index on Censorship opens up archive to mark 40th birthday, announces free expression award winners

Syria: On eve of peace plan, three more journalists killed

Bahrain: At least 31 extrajudicial killings since official commission of inquiry, says Bahrain Center for Human Rights

Sri Lanka: State media outlets label journalists "traitors"

Mali: Independent media one of the first casualties in coup

Kazakhstan: IFEX members help get editor out of jail

Europe and Central Asia: Reporters Without Borders demands access to Europe's migrant detention centres

Free Expression Spotlight ________________________________________

INTERNATIONAL: INDEX ON CENSORSHIP OPENS UP ARCHIVE TO MARK 40TH BIRTHDAY, ANNOUNCES FREE EXPRESSION AWARD WINNERS Index on Censorship is celebrating 40 years of existence, and wants you to be a part of it. In honour of the 40th anniversary, Index's publisher Sage has opened up the Index archive to the public for 40 days starting this week. Plus, hot off the press: the winners of Index's Free Expression Awards! Read more>>

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IFEX Communiqué Vol 21, No 13

Vatican’s Stem-Cell Censorship Sham

The Catholic Church has never had a particularly easy relationship with science. After all, this is the institution that sentenced Galileo Galilei as a heretic for his theories on the universe during the Roman Inquisition. Two thousand years later, the church forgave Galileo and called the whole misunderstanding a tragic mutual incomprehension but it remains safe to say the Vatican doesnt have a great track record when it comes to empirical open-mindedness.

So onlookers were surprised when the Vatican announced it would be hosting a global conference on the highly controversial issue of stem-cell research in Rome over four days in late April. The church held a similar conference in 2010 and 2011, which focused on its recommendation that stem-cell research should be limited to adult cells that can be harvested from live donors, not embryonic cells that destroy the source. But this years conference schedule featured some of the worlds foremost experts in embryonic research as keynote speakersleading some scientists to think that the Vatican might actually be looking for enlightenment on the topic.

That was not exactly case. Instead, the Vatican seems to have hoped that by including embryonic researchers in the program, it would appear that these scientists actually endorsed the Vaticans stance.

It might have worked to some extent, but after some of the speakers declined to censor their speeches, the Vatican abruptly canceled the conference altogether. According to the conference website, the event was canceled due to serious economic and logistic-organizational reasons that have completely jeopardized the success of the 3rd International Congress on Responsible Stem Cell Research. The scientists who were planning to attend say they are being stifled instead. I think the only interpretation is that we are being censored, Alan Trounson, president of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine in San Francisco, said in a statement. It is very disappointing that they are unwilling to hear the truth.

Just what was the Vatican thinking? Inviting embryonic stem-cell researchers to a conference and then denying them the right to talk about their field of expertise was a major gamble. Had the speakers agreed to avoid reference to embryonic research, it would have given the disingenuous impression that they endorse the Holy Sees recommendation on adult stem-cell research only. Did the Vatican really think they could control the scientific community? Apparently so. Father Scott Borgman of the Pontifical Academy for Life, which co-organized the conference, had reportedly asked the speakers to limit their discussions to adult stem-cell research only. George Daly, a leading embryonic researcher with the Childrens Hospital in Boston, says he was actually told not to make embryonic researchhis field of expertisea focal point of his talk. When he told Borgman that he would still be touching on the topic in a historical context, higher-ups in the Vatican reportedly panicked. I had been encouraged to think that the Congress would be a forum for discussion of many areas of common interest to the Vatican and stem cell scientists, regardless of the disagreements over embryonic stem cells, Daly told The Daily Beast. We should all agree that clinical trials of new medical treatments based on stem cells should proceed according to rigorous principles to ensure patients are kept as safe as possible and free from exploitation. And we should all agree that premature claims of therapeutic efficacy and direct marketing of unproven interventions to vulnerable patients is a threat to legitimate attempts to develop experimental stem cell medicines.

Pope Benedict looks on during the mass in solemnity of the chair of St. Peter with new Cardinals in St. Peter's basilica at the Vatican on February 19, 2012. The Vatican stands by its decision to cancel the controversial conference as having a purely business motive. , Alberto Pizzoli, AFP / Getty Images

With the cancelation of the event, discourse between the two diverse entities will not have a venue. One Vatican official told the Catholic News Service that many of the Vaticans leaders were secretly glad the conference failed. I am infinitely relieved that the church has avoided a major blunder which would have confused the faithful for decades to come, the unnamed source said. The Holy Spirit has certainly shown to be present through those faithful members who drew attention to the ambiguity of the choice of speakers. I hope and pray that a review will be affected of the basis on which these congresses are planned.

Some stem-cell researchers are also relieved the conference wont go on. I personally am very uncomfortable with a scientific meeting run by a church, and one at which only certain types of science and scientists are allowed to attend, blogged Paul Knoepfler, an associate professor of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy at UC Davis School of Medicine who blogs about stem cell research at IPCell.com. Also I cant help but wonder, what would be the reaction if someone like Daley spent a few minutes of his talk discussing his embryonic cell research in a very nonconfrontational way? Would he be tasered or drop through some trap door straight to Hell?

Still, Knoepfler was hopeful. I view the canceled Vatican stem-cell meeting as a missed opportunity for a very much needed, open dialogue about stem cells, he told The Daily Beast. More specifically, I believe the reasons for the cancellation reflect an anti-scientific attitude by the highest level of Vatican leaders. More simply put, the attitude might be summed up by the phrase If you do not think like us, you are not welcome at our meeting, and well go so far as to cancel the whole thing to avoid your presence.

Inviting embryonic stem-cell researchers to a conference and then denying them the right to talk about their field of expertise was a major gamble.

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Vatican’s Stem-Cell Censorship Sham

Myanmar pledges end to censorship laws

Published: March. 29, 2012 at 2:00 PM

NAYPYITAW, Myanmar, March 29 (UPI) -- Officials say Myanmar's notoriously strict 50-year-old censorship laws may be a thing of the past with a pledge from the Ministry of Information to end to them.

Myanmar, which has some of the strictest censorship laws in the world, has not had a free press since 1962. While the censorship laws have recently loosened, censors still have the power to nix stories on sensitive subjects, such as the formation of labor unions.

Voice of America reported Ye Htut of the Ministry of Information said in a recent workshop on media freedom censorship laws would be scrapped by the end of the year, as the new government drafts media law to replace them.

"We want to maintain the stability and law and order in our country. In the previous government before 1962, there's a press freedom in our country," Htut said. "And instead of informing the general public, media themselves created a crisis."

While the end to censorship has created a buzz among journalists, they worry about the cutthroat competition that could ensue.

"It's going to be a bloodbath," said Ross Dunkley, publisher of the English language weekly, The Myanmar Times. "I mean, that's the absolute truth ... you get some [daily newspapers] up and running, then I figure you're going to see in the first year of the dailies at least 100 publications die."

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Myanmar pledges end to censorship laws

Yankees' Ivan Nova takes control as he vies for rotation spot

TAMPA, Fla. For the first time this spring, Yankees right-hander Ivan Nova displayed command of all four of his pitches.

Facing the Toronto Blue Jays in a Triple-A game today, Nova allowed three runs on seven hits in 7 innings, with all of the runs coming in his last two innings.

Today was the first time I saw all four pitches working, said Russell Martin, who caught Nova.

Martin said the only mistake of the day came on a home run he described as a wind-aided fly ball. But Nova commanded his fastball, curveball, slider and changeup.

Manager Joe Girardi said he pitched Nova in a minor-league game to avoid giving the Baltimore Orioles a look at the righty so soon before the start of the season. Nova is battling for a spot in the rotation.

Reliever Rafael Soriano also got his work in at the minor-league complex, pitching an inning in a Double-A game against the Blue Jays.

Right-hander Michael Pineda scheduled start Friday night against the Philadelphia Phillies could prove critical as the Yankees sort out their starting rotation.

I want to see how sharp he is and to get some distance from him, Girardi said of Pineda, whose fastball as consistently been a few ticks below his average of 94 mph last season.

Andy Pettitte will likely throw a simulated game this weekend, though the Yankees are still unsure of when hell be ready to rejoin the rotation. Girardi estimated a return date for sometime in May, though he wouldnt get specific.

Girardi said Pettittes timeline going forward will largely be dictated by how his body responds after making actual starts. But its unclear when Pettitte will be ready to pitch in games.

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Yankees' Ivan Nova takes control as he vies for rotation spot

Keep the social media cowboys at bay

29 March 2012 Last updated at 20:22 ET By Fiona Graham Technology of business reporter, BBC News

When movie rental service Netflix took the decision to split the company, forcing customers to sign up to two accounts if they wanted to both watch movies online and rent physical DVDs, it may have expected that some of its users would be a little ticked off.

What it hadn't anticipated was that those users would take to social networks like Twitter and Facebook in their thousands to complain about the move - forcing the company into a massive U-turn.

In a possibly more predictable faux pas, fast-food giant McDonald's launched a social media marketing campaign where it encouraged users to tweet happy tales about dining with the company.

Unfortunately, the #McDStories tag ended up being used to express many people's less than positive thoughts about the home of the Big Mac.

Tales of big business coming a cropper in the brave new world of social networking are becoming commonplace.

But if you're a small or medium sized business, do you need to worry about what your customers are saying about you online?

For Alex Bard of Desk.com, the customer support tool launched recently by customer relationship management specialists Salesforce.com, the answer is an unequivocal yes.

"The conversations are happening already. It's not in the control of small or even big business," he says.

Mr Bard quotes Amazon founder Jeff Bezos: "If you make customers unhappy in the physical world, they might each tell six friends. If you make customers unhappy on the internet, they each tell 6,000 friends."

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Keep the social media cowboys at bay