FRANCE-UNESCO/RSF

MARCH 12 2008 16:55h

Media Body Accuses UNESCO of Bowing to Censors

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The group accused UNESCO of yielding to pressure from some of the 15 member countries on the list by dropping its backing for the event.

A leading media watchdog accused a United Nations agency of "grovelling" to authoritarian governments by dropping sponsorship of a free speech day on Wednesday.

Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, organised its second Online Free Expression Day on which it published a list of "Internet Enemies" -- governments it says imprison Internet users.

The group accused the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) of yielding to pressure from some of the 15 member countries on the list by dropping its backing for the event.

"Unfortunately, it seems we have gone back 20 years, to the time when authoritarian regimes called the shots at UNESCO headquarters in Paris," the group said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

"UNESCO's grovelling shows the importance of Online Free Expression Day and the need to protest against governments that censor."

UNESCO responded by saying it supported freedom of expression on the Internet but withdrew its sponsorship because of what it said was misleading use of its logo to indicate support for RSF's views.

"In its communications on the day, RSF published material concerning a number of UNESCO's member states, which UNESCO had not been informed of and could not endorse," it said in a statement.

The countries listed by RSF were: Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam and Zimbabwe.

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