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The 2007 IPA Freedom Prize Goes To Zimbabwean Publisher Trevor Ncube

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  • The 2007 IPA Freedom Prize Goes To Zimbabwean Publisher Trevor Ncube

    THE 2007 IPA FREEDOM PRIZE GOES TO ZIMBABWEAN PUBLISHER TREVOR NCUBE

    Issued by: Mail & Guardian
    Bizcommunity.com, South Africa
    May 17 2007

    During the opening ceremony of the 2nd Cape Town Book Fair on 15 June
    2007, Zimbabwean publisher Trevor Ncube will be receiving the 2007
    IPA Freedom Prize in recognition for exemplary courage in upholding
    freedom of expression and freedom to publish in his country and
    internationally.

    The board of the International Publishers' Association (IPA) selected
    Trevor Ncube as Prize-winner from among many highly commendable
    candidates, nominated by IPA members, individual publishers and human
    rights' organisations.

    Ana Maria Cabanellas, President of IPA, declares: "Trevor Ncube's work
    as a publisher and his wholehearted support of freedom of expression
    have often brought him into conflict with Zimbabwean authorities and
    endangered his personal safety. Despite repeated threats of violence
    and attempts to strip him of his Zimbabwean citizenship, Trevor
    Ncube's newspapers have persistently continued to expose corruption
    and human rights abuses in Zimbabwe, thus encouraging healthy dissent
    and criticism both in the public and private sectors. We award this
    Prize to Trevor Ncube in deep respect for his courage as a publisher
    and as a salute to the passion, the integrity, and the steadfastness
    that he so marvellously demonstrates."

    On the same occasion, IPA will be awarding the "2007 IPA Freedom
    Prize-Special Award" to Hrant Dink and Anna Politkovskaya. Hrant
    Dink, a Turk of Armenian descent, was the editor-in-chief of the
    Armenian-Turkish weekly newspaper Agos, which sought to provide a voice
    for the Armenian community and create a dialogue between Turks and
    Armenians. In October 2006, he was convicted and given a six-month
    suspended sentence for the crime of "insulting Turkishness" under
    Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code. On 19 January 2007, he was shot
    dead on the street in front of his Istanbul office at the age of 52.

    Anna Politkovskaya was the special correspondent for the Russian
    newspaper, Novaya Gazeta, who documented the horrific crimes committed
    in the war in Chechnya. She was also an outspoken critic of Vladimir
    Putin and of the Kremlin's role in Chechnya. She was shot and killed
    in her apartment building in Moscow on 7, October 2006, the apparent
    victim of a contract killing. She was 48.

    Bjørn Smith-Simonsen, Chair of IPA's Freedom to Publish Committee,
    says: "The murders of Dink and Politkovskaya were vile. In giving them
    the '2007 IPA Freedom Prize-Special Award', we rise to celebrate their
    courage, their humanity, and their witness. We rise to celebrate the
    free word in the face of oppressive regimes. We also hope that this
    special award will remind the Russian and Turkish authorities that
    full light must be shed on all the aspects of these two cases."

    More about Trevor Ncube, recipient of the 2007 IPA Freedom Prize: Born
    and educated in and outside Zimbabwe, Trevor Ncube became Lecturer
    in Political Science at the University of Zimbabwe. He left to become
    Deputy Editor of the financial weekly, Financial Gazette before joining
    The Zimbabwe Independent as Editor. He later bought the paper as well
    as its sister weekly, The Standard. After a few years he also acquired
    the South African based regional weekly, The Mail and Guardian. Ncube
    is currently the Chief Executive of the three independent weeklies,
    the only private and critical newspapers still published in Zimbabwe.

    More about the IPA Freedom Prize and the Cape Town Book Fair: Created
    in 2005, the IPA Freedom Prize is awarded for exemplary courage in
    upholding freedom of expression and freedom to publish. It is intended
    to honour, normally each year, a person, organisation or institution
    that has made a notable contribution to the defence and/promotion of
    freedom to publish anywhere in the world. The prize-winner receives
    the sum of 5,000 CHF (approximately 3,000 EUR or 4,000 USD).

    The IPA Publishers' Freedom Prize will be presented during the
    opening ceremony of the 2nd Cape Town Book Fair on 15 June 2007
    by IPA President Ana Maria Cabanellas. For more on this event,
    whose theme for 2007 is "More than Black on White", please see:
    www.capetownbookfair.com

    More about IPA: The International Publishers Association is the global
    non-governmental organisation representing all aspects of book and
    journal publishing worldwide. Established in 1896, IPA's mission is to
    promote and protect publishing and to raise awareness for publishing
    as a force for cultural and political advancement worldwide. It is
    an industry association with a human rights mandate.

    IPA promotes intellectual property, fights against censorship and
    currently has 65 member associations in 53 countries.

    http://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/19 6/90/14790.html

    --Boundary_(ID_eHbKWR2+nuFHLdjxhR tzfw)--
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