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Posted: 5/28/2013 11:37:42 AM EST
A Ugandan policeman holds up a newspaper as media and members of Uganda's Human Rights Network for Journalists protest outside the Daily Monitor newspaper head office, just before police fired tear gas to disperse the demonstration, in downtown Kampala, Uganda Tuesday, May 28, 2013. Ugandan police are occupying one of Kampala daily's premises for a ninth straight day amid growing outrage over the government's seizure of the newspaper that published an army general's concerns about an alleged secret plot for the president's son to succeed his father. (AP Photo/Rebecca Vassie)
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Posted: 5/27/2013 12:18:28 PM EST
Myanmar Opposition Leader Aung San Suu Kyi, center, talks to journalists as she attends Central Executive Committee (CEC) meeting of her National League for Democracy party at a restaurant in Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, May 27, 2013. Suu Kyi, rights groups and Islamic leaders expressed dismay over plans by authorities in western Myanmar to revive a two-child limit on Muslim Rohingya families. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)
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Posted: 5/27/2013 7:12:17 AM EST
A Renault Zoe new electric car is displayed during a meeting with journalists in Lisbon March 14, 2013. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante
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Posted: 5/26/2013 9:56:33 AM EST
A Lebanese army officer stands next to a damaged car as he asks journalists to step back, at the scene where a rocket struck a car exhibit, at the Mar Mikhael district south of Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday May 26, 2013. Rockets slammed Sunday into two Beirut neighborhoods that are strongholds of Lebanon's Hezbollah group, wounding at least 4 people, Lebanese security officials and media said. Tensions have been running high in Lebanon, and Syrian rebels have threatened to retaliate against the militant Shiite Hezbollah group for sending fighters to assist President Bashar Assad's forces in Syria. (AP Photo/Ahmad Omar)
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Posted: 5/24/2013 4:35:55 PM EST
IMF chief Christine Lagarde speaks to journalists after magistrates gave her a "supervised witness" status in an arbitration case in Paris May 24, 2013. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
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Posted: 5/24/2013 4:35:55 PM EST
IMF chief Christine Lagarde speaks to journalists after magistrates gave her a "supervised witness" status in an arbitration case in Paris May 24, 2013. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
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Posted: 5/24/2013 4:35:55 PM EST
IMF chief Christine Lagarde speaks to journalists after magistrates gave her a "supervised witness" status in an arbitration case in Paris May 24, 2013. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
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Posted: 5/24/2013 4:35:55 PM EST
IMF chief Christine Lagarde speaks to journalists after magistrates gave her a "supervised witness" status in an arbitration case in Paris May 24, 2013. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
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Posted: 5/24/2013 9:55:05 AM EST
Ugandan Police surround the offices of the Daily Monitor newspaper, preventing all journalists from leaving according to the paper's political editor, in Kampala, Uganda Monday, May 20, 2013. Ugandan police forcibly entered the premises of the independent newspaper to look for evidence against an army general who recently questioned the president's alleged plan to have his son succeed him, witnesses said Monday. (AP Photo/Stephen Wandera)
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Posted: 5/22/2013 2:29:12 PM EST
In this picture taken on Saturday, May 11, 2013, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, left, and his close ally Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei wave to journalists as they arrive at the election headquarters of the interior ministry for registering Masheaei's candidacy for the upcoming presidential election, in Tehran, Iran. By now, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is well accustomed to enduring blows from Iran's ruling clerics as his reputation fell from favored son to political outcast. But their intended parting shot _ barring his chief aide from the presidential race _ may be just the opening act in Ahmadinejad's reinvention as a self-styled opposition force. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)
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Posted: 5/22/2013 12:52:37 PM EST
South Africa President Jacob Zuma answers questions from journalists after his meeting with Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (not pictured) at the Presidential Palace in Algiers April 15, 2013. REUTERS/Louafi Larbi
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Posted: 5/22/2013 10:16:25 AM EST
Journalists show off signs, pinned to their backs, as they stage a silent protest during a cabinet meeting in Kiev, May 22, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer
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Posted: 5/22/2013 10:16:25 AM EST
Journalists show off signs, pinned to their backs, as they stage a silent protest during a cabinet meeting in Kiev, May 22, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer
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Posted: 5/22/2013 8:13:50 AM EST
Journalists show off signs, pinned to their backs, as they stage a silent protest during a cabinet meeting in Kiev, May 22, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer
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Posted: 5/22/2013 1:41:41 AM EST
Artist Ai Weiwei speaks to journalists at his studio in Beijing, China, Wednesday, May 22, 2013. Ai's music video accompanying his heavy metal single “Dumbass’’ released Wednesday depicts an insensitive, overbearing state power that tramples on individual rights. The video is meant to reconstruct his 81-day secret detention in 2011, which was part of the overall crackdown by Chinese authorities on dissent. Ai later was convicted of tax evasion, which his supporters saw as punishment for his activism. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)
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Posted: 5/22/2013 1:41:41 AM EST
Artist Ai Weiwei speaks to journalists at the courtyard of his studio in Beijing, China, Wednesday, May 22, 2013. Ai's music video accompanying his heavy metal single “Dumbass’’ released Wednesday depicts an insensitive, overbearing state power that tramples on individual rights. The video is meant to reconstruct his 81-day secret detention in 2011, which was part of the overall crackdown by Chinese authorities on dissent. Ai later was convicted of tax evasion, which his supporters saw as punishment for his activism. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)
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Posted: 5/22/2013 1:41:41 AM EST
Artist Ai Weiwei speaks to journalists at his studio in Beijing, China, Wednesday, May 22, 2013. Ai's music video accompanying his heavy metal single “Dumbass’’ released Wednesday depicts an insensitive, overbearing state power that tramples on individual rights. The video is meant to reconstruct his 81-day secret detention in 2011, which was part of the overall crackdown by Chinese authorities on dissent. Ai later was convicted of tax evasion, which his supporters saw as punishment for his activism.(AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)
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Posted: 5/21/2013 7:24:27 PM EST
A group of visiting journalists try out the improved motion-detecting capabilities of the new Kinect controller for Microsoft's next-generation Xbox One entertainment and gaming console system, Tuesday, May 21, 2013, in Redmond, Wash. The new Kinect, which will come standard with the Xbox One can also see users in total darkness and has a wider field of view than the previous Kinect device in use with the Xbox 360. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
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Posted: 5/21/2013 3:33:26 AM EST
FILE - In this May 13, 2013, file photo, the screen on the phone console is seen at the reception desk at The Associated Press Washington bureau. The Justice Department’s latest effort to examine who journalists are talking to _ the secret subpoena of Associated Press phone records from April and May of last year _ demonstrates how government investigators are guided more by policy and the judgments of high-ranking officials than by specific laws or, in this case, the need to satisfy an independent federal judge. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)
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Posted: 5/20/2013 12:52:55 PM EST
FILE -- In this Thursday Sept. 29, 2011 file photo, Jordanian journalists protest in front the Jordanian House of Parliament, symbolically wearing tape over their mouths, as they protest over proposed changes to the anti-corruption law they believe will muzzle press freedoms, in Amman, Jordan. Jordan’s prime minister Abdullah Ensour told a meeting of the Geneva-based International Press Institute (IPI) that Jordan has “come a long way” in improving both legislation governing press freedoms and the standards of a national media still reeling under long years of state censorship. Nidal Mansour, head of the Amman-based Center for Defending Freedom of Journalists --IPI’s hosting partner -- said that the press law enacted last year was designed to muzzle press freedoms. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon, File)