Author: OPC of America

Bolivia Re-Election

The OPC takes this occasion to express its alarm over what appear to be government-inspired attacks on the press, both physically and verbally.

More Good Times Than Bad for Sir Harold Evans

One of the most impressive things about Sir Harold Evans is that while he ran many newspapers, started a magazine and presided over the largest U.S. publishing house, people in the audience at the December 14 Book Night also got the sense that Evans is a real reporter. The kind of reporter who gets his hands dirty to get a story and relishes seeing the after effects of the reporting for the public good, as when he reported on preventable cancer treatments for women in Great Britain, which he called his most satisfying journalism experience of all time.

CPJ: Philippines, Somalia Fuel Death Toll

At least 68 journalists worldwide were killed for their work in 2009, the highest yearly tally ever documented by the Committee to Protect Journalists, the organization said in its year-end analysis. The record toll was driven in large part by the election-related slaughter of more than 30 media workers in the Philippine province of Maguindanao, the deadliest event for the press in CPJ history.

Freedom of the Press Committee Report to OPC Board of Governors

OPC’s press-freedom committee doesn’t often have cause to address itself to issues in the United States, though it’s far from unprecedented. The most recent example, involving a Florida public official, is significant because it illustrates the potential effect of what the Committee does, which is often obscured by distance.

Ecuador December 8, 2009

The OPC would like to endorse the declaration of the Inter-American Press Association that the Communications Law placed before the National Assembly is a clear threat to the freedom of information in Ecuador. Taken at face value, the proposed law might not seem overly threatening. But these measures become extremely dangerous when set in the context of what has been happening to the media in Ecuador.

Final Broadcast of Lehrer NewsHour

Friday marked the final broadcast of PBS’s “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.” Beginning Monday the show will be titled “PBS NewsHour,” with Lehrer and rotating senior correspondents Gwen Ifill, Judy Woodruff and Jeffrey Brown will co-anchor the hourly broadcast.

OPC Denounces “Suicide” Verdict in Death of Another Russian Journalist

Once again, a Russian reporter who has angered government officials has died under mysterious circumstances. Once again, the authorities have decided — with no evidence at all, and very little plausibility — that Olga Kotovskaya committed suicide. But this time, after her colleagues insisted that the suicide theory was ridiculous and that she must have been murdered in retaliation for her work, the regional prosecutor has re-considered and opened an investigation into the death. Once again, as so many times in the past, we write to urge the Russian government to expend all possible efforts to make sure the investigation is thorough and transparent.

2009 Was a Strong Year for the OPC

The Overseas Press Club approaches 2010 with strength and optimism. We have had a terrific year in spite of the economy with strong programs throughout the season, a highly successful fund-drive and equally spectacular 70th Anniversary Awards Dinner featuring Jim Lehrer, Christiane Amanpour and Ruth Gruber.

Kapuscinski’s International Impact on Today’s Journalists

The two-day symposium at New York University October 6-7, After Kapuściński: The Art of Reportage produced a remarkable discussion on the subject of narrative non-fiction. Questions that persist through the chainof literary movements in shifting standards for journalism,such as the function of the “I,” where to find the narrative,verisimilitude in fiction vs. nonfiction, what constitutes…

New Board Members for WPJ

NEW YORK: World Policy Journal added six new members to its editorial board in November and appointed longtime OPC member Seymour Topping as its first chairman. Topping spent 33 years with The New York Times as a foreign correspondent, foreign editor and managing editor. After retiring from The Times, he was administrator of the Pulitzer…