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From Green Left Weekly, February 8, 2006.
Jon Lamb Journalists and human-rights
organisations within East Timor and internationally are increasingly concerned
about the consequences of a new penal code on defamation, which includes
the penalty of up to three years' Journalists and legal
experts within East Timor are dismayed that the defamation law has got
this far without any parliamentary debate or public consultation. According
to the South East Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA), "The Under Article 176 of
the law, the term of imprisonment for defamation has been doubled from
one to two years. In instances where the defamation is both through the
media and is deemed to have been committed against In the context of East Timor's relatively new and poorly resourced judiciary and presidential and with national assembly elections due in 2007, SEAPA warned that "Criminal defamation provisions could be misapplied or broadly interpreted, to the detriment of freedom of expression". The International Press
Institute has written to Gusmao stating its concerns over the law, noting
that "in seeking to replace the Indonesian Penal Code, the East Timorese
government is merely replacing one repressive law with |
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Copy Right: JSMP-DIli,
June 2004
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