At the Frontline Club in London this Wednesday:
Only a
few tickets remain
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PEN Atlas
presents: Eritrea’s Forgotten Journalists
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Wednesday
8 February, 7pm, £12.50
The
Frontline Club, 13 Norfolk Place, London W2 1QJ
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According to the Committee to Protect Journalists,
Eritrea has the most censored press in the world –behind
North Korea and Azerbaijan. Since the government banned private
press in 2001, many journalists have been abducted or imprisoned
without trial, including those who had reported on divisions
within the ruling party.
Over the years, officials have offered
inconsistent explanations for the arrests – accusing the
journalists of involvement in anti-state conspiracies or skirting
military service. Meanwhile, fragments of information smuggled
out of the country by Eritreans fleeing into exile help to create
an alarming picture of the dangers faced by journalists who
report stories that fall outside official state communications.
Has Eritrea become Africa’s North Korea?
With only state communication remaining,
contacting the outside world has become nearly impossible.
What was once a relatively unknown and under-reported country is
now at the forefront of the EU’s mind, as Eritreans make up a
significant number of those entering Europe on dangerous
crossings. Who are Eritrea’s forgotten journalists,
and how did this extreme stifling of press freedom come to
be?
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Chaired by Dr
Idil Osman (@idil_osman). Idil holds a PhD from
Cardiff University’s School of Journalism, Media and Cultural
Studies and her thesis examined the role of diasporic media in
conflict zones. She has worked for over a decade as a national
and international journalist for the BBC, the Guardian and
the Voice
of America. Previously a Teaching Fellow in Media and
Communication at University of Leicester’s Department of Media
and Communication, she’s now a Research Associate and Senior
Teaching Fellow in the Department of Development Studies at SOAS.
Eyob Teklay Ghilazghy is
an Eritrean author, academic and advocate for human
rights. He holds an MSc. in Sustainable Development
from SOAS, University of London. Eyob fled persecution in
Eritrea and lives in exile in Uganda. In 2013, Eyob
co-founded Africa Monitors, a human rights organisation based in
Uganda. Eyob also co-founded and is secretary of PEN Eritrea
in exile. During the period of October 2016 to April 2017,
Eyob is a resident writer with English PEN, based in London, during
which time he is working on a report on the situation of freedom
of expression in Eritrea.
Vanessa Berhe is an
Eritrean activist currently studying law at SOAS. She founded the
organisation One Day Seyoum to raise
awareness about the lack of press freedom in Eritrea and put
pressure on the Eritrean government to release unjustly
imprisoned journalists. The organisation carries the name of her
uncle, journalist Seyoum Tsehaye, who was imprisoned in 2001
without trial.
Antonia Benfield is a
barrister specialising in human rights and refugee law and an
advocate for social justice. In 2016 she was involved in the key
legal case examining the country situation in Eritrea and what is
driving increasing numbers of Eritreans to flee the country. The
case successfully established that there has been a decline in
the human rights situation and that persecution by the Eritrean
government is endemic. The case particularly focused on the
repression of free speech and the reliability of sources from
within the country.
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Catch
up with previous PEN Atlas events
PEN Atlas events was launched in
February 2016. Audio recordings of our previous events are
available online.
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PEN Atlas presents: The View from Turkey
What
is it like to be a Turkish writer in these times?
Journalist-author Ece
Temelkuran, novelist Burhan Sönmez
and translator Canan
Marasligil discussed the main issues of the
moment through a literary lens with Maureen Freely,
President of English PEN.
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PEN Atlas presents: Svetlana Alexievich
In
a special collaboration between PEN Atlas, Cambridge Literary
Festival and Fitzcarraldo Editions, Svetlana Alexievich,
recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature 2015, was in
conversation with the journalist and author James Meek.
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PEN Atlas presents: Words Cannot Be Killed
Former
prisoner of conscience and journalist Tasneem Khalil
and Ahsan
Akbar, director of Dhaka Literary Festival,
discuss the state of freedom of expression in Bangladesh with BBC
broadcaster Razia
Iqbal
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