Thursday, May 13, 2010

[Guinean news] Presidential election: only for the wealthy

The Burkinabe site Fasozine (via AllAfrica.com) reported that Guinea's National Independent Electoral Commission decided that aspirants for the June 27 presidential election must submit a deposit of 500 million Guinean francs (about US$100,000) to ensure their candidacy.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

[Guinea/RCPV news] Guinea RPCV to be on radio show today discussing journalism and democracy

Guinea RPCV Jennifer Swift-Morgan, co-founder of our partner organization Alliance Guinea, will appear on WNYC radio's The Brian Lehrer Show. She will be appearing with Nassirou Diallo, a Guinean journalist who fled the country following last year's massacres. They will appear on the show at around 10:30 am on Wednesday May 12 to discuss the topic of journalism and democracy in Guinea. The show can be listened to live online at WNYC's website or after the fact on demand after the fact here. Diallo will also be a featured speaker this evening at an event at Columbia University; click here for more details.

Thursday, May 06, 2010

Democracy and media freedom in Guinea: a discussion in NYC

From Alliance Guinea

Democracy Under Fire:
Freedom of Media in Guinea

When: Wednesday, May 12, 7-9pm
Where: Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Stabile Student Center

Moderator: Milton Allimadi, Publisher & CEO, Black Star News
Featured Speaker: Nassirou Diallo, Le 4ème Pouvoir

Panel discussion and interactive debate to follow.

On September 28, 2009, the military of the West African country of Guinea stormed a stadium filled with tens of thousands of peaceful pro-democracy demonstrators and opened fire. In the end over 150 people were killed, 1700 wounded and more than 100 women and girls brutally raped in what a Human Rights Watch and a UN Commission of Inquiry have deemed crimes against humanity.

Journalist Nassirou Diallo was there - covering the events live on the radio before the station owner cut the signal. It wasn't the first time his reporting and political talk shows had put him in danger and the previous threats, arrests, and beatings he and other journalists in Guinea had received from soldiers told him that this last eye witness report would not be tolerated. He left Guinea that night and is now a journalist in exile living in New York City, using new media to continue his work in the run-up to the elections now scheduled for June 27 in Guinea. If held they will be the first democratic presidential elections in the country's history.

Join this talk with a journalist on the frontlines and a lively panel of experts addressing questions of the freedom of media in times of political and social turmoil and the situation in Guinea in particular, the nexus of journalism and activism, and the role of new media in opening the space for expression across borders and diasporas.

The Columbia School of Journalism is located at 2950 Broadway at 116th St., New York, NY, 10027 - see here for directions

Presented by Alliance Guinea in partnership with the Columbia University School of Journalism, the Guinean Forces Vives in the USA, the Committee to Protect Journalists and Columbia University's African Studies Working Group. To RSVP and for more information email allianceguinea@gmail.com or connect on Facebook.

For Black Star New's feature on Nassirou Diallo, "Guinea Frontline Reporter," see http://www.blackstarnews.com/news/135/ARTICLE/6461/2010-04-12.html