UN Special Rapporteur on Iran “deplores” the persecution of BBC Persian staff and their families

UN Special Rapporteur on Iran “deplores” the persecution of BBC Persian staff and their families

The UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, Professor Javaid Rehman, has presented his first report to the United Nations Human Rights Council.

In his address, Professor Rehman raised with concern the ongoing persecution and harassment of BBC News Persian staff and their families by Iran.

Professor Rehman (pictured addressing the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on 11 March 2019) said he “deplores” the harassment of BBC Persian staff. His remarks raised concern about the ongoing, collective criminal investigation of BBC Persian staff and the asset-freeze which affects them and their families in Iran. He reiterated the seriousness of the persecution, which was also raised by his predecessor Asma Jahangir, including arbitrary detention and interrogation of family members in Iran. Professor Rehman also raised concern about the attacks on BBC Persian journalists in Iranian state media, in particular with fake and defamatory news being published to undermine their reputations.

The BBC made its unprecedented urgent appeal to the UN in late 2017. It is the first time in BBC history that the BBC has engaged with the UN over the protection of its journalists. Both the UN Special Rapporteur and the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres raised concern about the persecution of BBC Persian in their reports to the 40th session of the Human Rights Council.

The UK government mission to the United Nations raised concern with the “deteriorating” situation for freedom of expression in Iran. The UK highlighted that the “judicial harassment of BBC Persian staff and their families continues” and called upon Iran to cease the criminal investigation into BBC journalists and the harassment of their families.

Rana Rahimpour, a BBC Persian presenter (pictured in Geneva with AIB CEO Simon Spanswick), addressed the Council about her personal experience of the persecution, explaining how her father was subjected to a travel ban to prevent him from visiting her after her first child was born. She thanked the UN Secretary General for raising the case and raised concern about the reprisals against BBC Persian staff, explaining that “my colleagues have been warned against participating in our UN advocacy work by the Iranian authorities.”

International counsel for the BBC World Service, Caoilfhionn Gallagher QC and Jennifer Robinson, have filed a further UN complaint over the reprisals BBC Persian journalists have faced for engaging with the UN. They said, “Reprisals against BBC Persian journalists and their families for engaging with the UN is not just an attack on freedom of expression, but an attack on the integrity of the UN system. Such reprisals must be condemned in the strongest possible terms.”

Michelle Stanistreet of the National Union of Journalists said: “The Iranian authorities have been systematically targeting BBC Persian journalists in the UK, and their families in Iran, since the service launched satellite television in 2009. Our campaign to stop the harassment will persist until the authorities stop targeting NUJ members for simply for doing their jobs. Both the asset freeze and criminal investigations into the activities of journalists and other staff working for BBC Persian should be dropped.”

An event was held today at the Human Rights Council co-hosted by the BBC, the International Federation of Journalists and Doughty Street International to discuss the broader implications of the persecution of BBC Persian.

Simon Spanswick from the Association for International Broadcasting – a network of broadcasters that reach one billion viewers and listeners each week – explained how the persecution of BBC Persian is “among the worst cases globally” and is indicative of a worrying trend of harassment of journalists and broadcasters in their network.

At the event, the UK Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva, Julian Braithwaite, said “UK calls on Iran to cease the harassment of BBC Persian staff and their families – and the persecution of all independent journalists whether affiliated with the BBC or not”. He condemned the reprisals faced by BBC Persian staff.

Referring to the recent media freedom initiative announced by Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Ambassador Braithwaite said: “This case is one of the reasons we are making press freedom a particular focus for the UK. Iran’s treatment of BBC journalists will be a key part of our upcoming media freedom summit.”

The UN Special Rapporteur Professor Rehman reiterated at the event in Geneva on 12 March: “I will continue to urge Iran to cease its harassment of BBC Persian staff and their families.”

AIB Member SatADSL at CABSAT 2019, Your Platform as a Service

AIB Member SatADSL at CABSAT 2019, Your Platform as a Service

SatADSL will be present at CABSAT, taking place from March 12 to 14, 2019 in Dubai. The event is of extreme importance to both our clients and ourselves, since we are expanding to the Middle -East and Asia.

In the past years, SatADSL has expanded its offer in the Middle East. Now, it is only natural to be present at CABSAT, the dominant broadcast, digital media and satellite communications technology platform in Asia and North Africa. The event attracts 13,000+ attendees from 130+ countries and brings together 900+ exhibiting brands.

This year, SatADSL has the pleasure of inviting you to visit its stand to meet some of the senior management team – and presenting its Platform As A Service in Africa, Middle-East and Asia!

The event is also a great opportunity for end users, satellite and teleport operators to discover our offer of multi-satellite and multi-frequency services. As Caroline De Vos, co-founder & COO of SatADSL and in charge of public relations, explains, “SatADSL was already recognised as a leading provider of satellite connectivity services. At present, we are also making our bandwidth management tool ‒ the Service Delivery Platform in the Cloud, also known as the C-SDP ‒ directly available to Satellite operators, Teleport operators and Telco’s as a Platform As A Service, so that they can benefit from its value added services.”

You are interested in our service offering? We are establishing a personalised appointment program to welcome you in the best conditions at our stand (Hall6 Stand 31).  Contact us today to arrange a personal meeting at info@satadsl.net or +32 2 351 33 74.

More information about CABSAT: www.cabsat.com.

Copyright © 2019 SatADSL, All rights reserved.

AIB member Ruptly wins Gold at German Stevie®Awards

AIB member Ruptly wins Gold at German Stevie®Awards

Berlin, 7 March 2019: Global Multimedia Agency Ruptly has won top prize for its Ruptly Live Platform at the German Stevie® Awards.

Ruptly was awarded a Gold Stevie® Award in the Video Platform for Media and Publishers category, which recognises the best platforms designed specifically for media, publishers, and information providers who publish, distribute, and monetise video assets.

The innovative Ruptly Live platform enables publishers to license and instantly stream multiple live events direct to social media in just three clicks. The platform supports live streaming of up to 9 simultaneous events at once, as well as 360-degree videos.

 

Dmitry Keshishev, Chief Digital Officer at Ruptly, commented:

“This award is recognition of our commitment to pushing boundaries for publishers, enabling high quality, direct and instant access to global events. We will continue to innovate as we seek to open up global news events to publishers whether individual bloggers or major broadcasters.”

Michael Gallagher, president and founder of the Stevie Awards, said:

“We are delighted that the German Stevie Awards are once again awarding outstanding and, above all, innovative winners. We look forward to celebrating the winners and presenting them their awards at the awards ceremony in Munich on May 3rd. We extend our most heartfelt congratulations to all of this year’s Gold, Silver and Bronze Stevie Award winners.”

Gold, Silver and Bronze Stevie Award winners were selected by about 50 executives who participated in the judging process.  The winner of the Grand Stevie Awards will now be determined from among all winners. The Grand Stevie winner will be announced at the 3 May ceremony in Munich.

 

About Ruptly

Ruptly is a global multimedia agency headquartered in Berlin, Germany. Delivering “News That Expands Views” via real-time and archive visual news content to all media, Ruptly pushes the boundaries of video journalism, using the latest newsgathering technology. Ruptly offers readily-edited video packages through Video Feed, operational facilities and broadcast services through Ruptly Ops, and direct access to global events via live streaming through Ruptly Live. The agency is recognized for its work by the Drum Online Media Awards for “Best B2B News Site” in 2017, “Commercial Team of the Year” in 2018 and Ruptly Live platform is a finalist of both The Drum Online Media Awards and Global Media Innovator.

About the Stevie Awards

Stevie Awards are conferred in seven programs: the Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards, the German Stevie Awards, The American Business Awards, The International Business Awards®, the Stevie Awards for Great Employers, the Stevie Awards for Women in Business and the Stevie Awards for Sales & Customer Service. Stevie Awards competitions receive more than 12,000 entries each year from organisations in more than 70 nations. Honoring organisations of all types and sizes and the people behind them, the Stevies recognise outstanding performances in the workplace worldwide. Further details about the German Stevie Awards are available at www.StevieAwards.com/Deutschland.

RT France gains Middle East distribution

RT France gains Middle East distribution

RT has expanded its distribution partnership with Yahlive, a joint venture between SES and Yahsat, an Emirati satellite operator based in Abu Dhabi. RT France, the French-language news channel of the RT group based in the Paris media district of Boulogne-Billancourt, completes Yahlive’s bouquet of television channels. RT France will be available in HD for more than 10 million households in Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco for the next three years.

“We are happy to be featured on Yahlive and contribute to the diversity of their offering,” said Xenia Fedorova, President of RT France (pictured). “This expanded distribution positions us even more as the reference information channel that offers the region’s Francophone audience a wide range of stories and different perspectives on the news. Our audiences in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, in particular, have an appetite for the diversity of sources of information, and that’s what we want to bring them.”

A long-time partner of Yahlive, the RT group has also renewed in 2018 its partnership with the satellite transmission company to continue broadcasting RT International HD and RT Arabic HD originally signed in 2012.

Ammar Baranbo, Chief Operating Officer at Yahlive, commented: “We are excited to extend our long-term partnership and cooperation with RT and look forward to continuing to bring key regional and international stories to our audiences in the Middle East and North Africa. This partnership is a reflection of the technical excellence provided by Yahsat’s Al Yah1 satellite which allows us to deliver high-quality content based on our customer’s transmission needs, with the best possible signal quality.”

 

BBC launches ambitious season to cross divides

BBC launches ambitious season to cross divides

The BBC has launched an ambitious season of output that will be seen, heard and touched across all the Corporation’s channels, stations and platforms – and it all came from an elevator pitch, according to Director-General Tony Hall (pictured at the season launch in London).

It was in a lift (elevator) in Broadcasting House that season editor Emily Kasriel seized the opportunity to buttonhole the DG with the concept of what has become Crossing Divides, a multi-platform, multimedia season that explores how people can be brought together across lines that divide them in a fragmented world. And Hall says that it’s unlike anything the BBC has done before.

Crossing Divides will run across the year on TV, news, radio – national and local – and online starting on 4 March and it will bring people from conflicting sides together despite their differences – whether social, ethnic, political, religious, geographical or generational. The season will feature a broad range of programming, special reports and innovative events across the year, designed to reach audiences of all ages and create opportunities for new conversations.

Emily Kasriel (pictured) has written a blog on the BBC website that we reproduce here:

Crossing Divides is an ambitious season. Throughout the BBC in 2019 we are exploring the power and possibilities of encountering people with conflicting opinions, across divisions of race, class, faith, politics and generation.

We’re tackling one of the biggest challenges of our age – polarisation and fragmentation – to support one of the BBC’s public purposes, contributing to social cohesion.

Recently, I was in Coventry with the BBC local radio team, who brought together Faisal, who drives a black cab, and Uber driver Barry. Before they met, the two drivers spoke of anger and fear about their livelihoods, the future and each other. It was moving to witness the moment Barry and Faisal began to recognise the common humanity across the table. There were even tears and a hug as Faisal left to take his next fare.

How will it work?

Psychologists have long known we harbour a deep need to be understood. Once we feel acknowledged, we may be more willing to lower our defensive walls, even by an inch, creating the space for us to hear, perhaps for the first time, an alternative perspective.

Faisal and Barry’s encounter for BBC Coventry & Warwickshire is part of a ground-breaking Crossing Divides project across all 39 BBC Local Radio stations. Each has identified three poignant and passionate local divisions, and will bring together individuals from either side. These 100-plus encounters will kick-start conversations and phone-ins across England.

It’s not just about talking

There are many ways to engage with people across the divide. Our Brazilian Service tells a story from the City of God, the violent Brazilian favela, where the very young and the very old lack affection and attention. They are crossing the generational divide by sharing capoeira lessons, acting classes, and hugs.

Our series on BBC Two, Pilgrimage, follows eight personalities with wildly different beliefs and faiths as they travel together on a demanding pilgrimage to see if they can understand each other better. BBC Monitoring discovers a dictionary enabling North and South Koreans to communicate, after decades of conflict caused their languages to grow apart.

Credit: BBC

Solutions-focused journalism

Crossing Divides has grown out of the BBC News Solutions-focused journalism project. Alongside reporting problems, journalists are encouraged to explore solutions – looking at limitations, seeing whether a solution can scale, and asking rigorous questions.

Crossing Divides isn’t all hugs and love-ins. We don’t expect people with vastly different outlooks to agree, or even get on. When they don’t, we tell that story too, like the encounter between an anti-fascist activist from Portland, Oregon, and a member of the all-male far right Proud Boys group. The men agree to sit across a table for an Our World Crossing Divides documentary, and there’s a tangible sense of danger, fury and contempt.

BBC’s Mike Wendling (centre) sits down with a Proud Boy (on the left) and an anti-facist activist. Credit: BBC.

Our Stories

We were encouraged to create this season across the BBC after the success of our week-long News pilot in 2018. Our Stories attracted more than 5m page views, and in excess of 300,000 comments, shares and likes on social media.

We broadcast the moving tale of Indonesian ex-child soldiers on opposite sides of a bloody conflict. Ronald Regang, a Christian, and Iskander Slameth, a Muslim, met after the end of the conflict at a trauma healing centre for child soldiers .

Once sent out to mutilate and murder others of a different faith, today they help keep a fragile peace on their island, Ambon. Following the BBC report, the two friends became national heroes, and a larger-than-life mural of the pair appeared in Ambon City, inspiring the community.

Ronald Regang and Iskander Slameth

Crossing Divides aims to spark a huge amount of conversations across divides. BBC News Labs and BBC World Service build on a successful pilot to create an interactive comic in which you can have a conversation with a virtual character who has different ideas about controversial topics such as Brexit, immigration or gun control.

One of the challenges of Crossing Divides is finding ways to help individuals and communities who share common spaces but rarely interact. We’re partnering with public transport companies across the UK for a Crossing Divides on the Move day in the summer, encouraging passengers to have conversations with strangers. Meanwhile, our BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC News Common Groundproject will pair up thousands of people with opposing political perspectives for face-to-face conversations.

We’re not endorsing particular solutions to fragmentation or implying that power relations can be equalised through an encounter. The ambition is to create more understanding. For each one of us, exposing ourselves to ideas which may challenge our core beliefs and the sense of who we are can feel like a risky endeavour – especially if we feel our community is under threat. But in doing so, we may discover our identities are more complex than we thought, with contradictions previously kept hidden, even from ourselves. We may realise we share beliefs, experiences and even values with enemies we feared or strangers we dismissed.

For this season, we have drawn on the work of Miles HewstoneJulie Van de VyvertLibby Drury, the Behavioural Insights TeamBritish FutureMore in CommonConciliation Resources Jonathan Haidt as well as the Hedrodox AcademyDouglas StoneAmanda RipleySolutions Journalism Network and Better Angels, who have a track record in negotiating successful conversations between Republicans and Democrats.

 

 

 

Viz University gets over 300 enrollments within the first few hours of announcing their new range of free courses for graphic designers

Viz University gets over 300 enrollments within the first few hours of announcing their new range of free courses for graphic designers

Viz University, the training arm of Vizrt – the world’s leading provider of visual storytelling tools for media content creators -, has made a range of courses for graphics designers completely free. The announcement last week resulted in at one point 100 people per hour enrolling for the courses.

The Viz Artist free series contains an introduction to the free Viz Artist tool, with further courses in scripting, design and their most popular course, Transition Logic, one of the key techniques for the Viz Artist design toolbox.

“Viz Artist designers are a sought after commodity in the media industry. We’re making it easy for the designers to expand their career with our tools. Now everything they need to start a career as a Viz Artist designer is available for free on Viz University. Creating stunning, unforgettable graphics has never been easier.”
Gro Beret Heggernes, Head of Viz University.

There is a growing global community of Vizrt certified graphic designers. Recently Singapore-based broadcaster Mediacorp invested the time of their graphic designers in the Viz Artist Designer Certification course, with eight of them passing and now being fully accredited Viz Artist Designers.

The Viz Artist Designers Facebook page has nearly 2000 followers, with designers from all over the world share content, share knowledge and support each other with answers.

Visit Viz University 

Copyright © 2019 Vizrt, All rights reserved.