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A TRIAL NO LONGER IN SECRET Reporting ban lifted on member’s anti-war case
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‘WE DESERVE SOME OF YOUR £40 MILLION’ Express journalists prepare strike for fair pay
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TWO VICTORIES FOR FREEDOM OF INFORMATION Political upsets followed members’ FoI work
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SIGN UP A COLLEAGUE, SAYS THE PRESIDENT Union‘s future depends on recruitment
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LIFE ON FLAT EARTH The man behind the book that shook journalism
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DOUBLE TROUBLE FOR BLACK YOUNGSTERS How to break into a middle-class white job?
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ON SCREEN OR ON PAPER? Start of debate on future of the Journalist
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WE THINK WE’VE GOT PROBLEMS? A journalist’s week in Europe’s last dictatorship
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‘A LUDDITE AND PROUD’ Not against technology but how bosses exploit it
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MALAWI:

REPORTER Mike Chipalasa and managing editor James Mphande of the Daily Times in Malawi have been charged with “publishing false news likely to lead to a breach of public order”, over an article quoting an opposition leader as saying the government was trying to rig the 2009 elections.

CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

Faustin Bambou, editor of a weekly in the Central African Republic, was sentenced to six months in prison in January but pardoned after six weeks. He had been charged over an article claiming that two government ministers received massive commissions from a French nuclear company.