Radio presenter suspended in Equatorial Guinea

Juan Pedro Mendene, a radio presenter for the Equatorial Guinean broadcaster RTVGE, has been suspended for mentioning the Libyan uprising on his radio show. His live show was halted on the orders of Federico Abaga Ondo, the Secretary of State for Information and Press. The government has imposed a total news blackout on the uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East.

Top journalist sacked for reporting rumours Mexico’s president is an alcoholic

Mexico’s latest media scandal is the dismissal of popular radio and television host Carmen Aristegui, an incisive journalist who worked for the MVS radio network in the early morning slot. Her removal from the air was confirmed yesterday by Alejandro Vargas Guajardo, president of MVS Radio in a Twitter message reported the political news site Animal Politico.

Aristegui’s exit is linked to a report on the alleged alcoholism of President Felipe Calderon. Aristegui talked about the president’s alleged condition in her programme last week, after a group of congressmen from the leftist Workers Party (PT) hung a banner about the president’s alleged problem, while the Mexican Chamber of Deputies was in session. The chamber canceled the meeting because of the banner, but no other Mexican news outlet mentioned the incident. The banner in question asked rhetorically:

Would you let a drunkard drive your car?

In her news segment, Aristegui not only showed the disturbance in the Chamber of Deputies, but also asked

Does the president or does he not have an alcohol problem?… The presidency should give a clear and formal answer with respect to this

At first the radio network refused to give any details on her sacking, but an avalance of messages on Twitter and Facebook led the network to release an explanation. The official response simply said:

The journalist Carmen Aristegui transcended our ethics code and we have decided to end our contractual relationship

The president’s office also released a statement via its Labour Secretary Javier Lozano, they also said they would enforce their right of reply with the Radio Network MVS sometime this week.

Aristegui is a controversial figure in Mexico. She has been a well known reporter for the last 20 years and the top broadcaster for MVS News for the last two years.

In 2008, she also left W Radio, a national station owned by the Televisa network and the Spanish media consortium Prisa, because of editorial disagreements. Aristegui explained that she left “because of editorial incompatibilities.”

Aristegui is an award winning journalist who has received several Mexican journalism awards and Columbia University’s Maria Moors Cabot Award.

Sudan: Monte Carlo Arabic radio denied license

The Sudanese Ministry of Information has refused to renew the license of Monte Carlo radio’s Arabic service, which broadcasts in Sudan from Paris. The radio station was told that certain laws and regulations prevent the license renewal from taking place.  Similarly vague reasons were given to the BBC, when the British broadcaster’s Arabic radio service was banned from Sudan a few weeks ago. The government has insisted that neither decision was political, but the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) drew attention to the popularity of both stations, leaving no real cause for discontinuing broadcasts.