IFJ 30 April 2021
IFJ at World Press Freedom Day in Namibia
Information as a public good is the subject of World Press Freedom Day, held in Windhoek, Namibia, 30 years after the Windhoek Declaration (3 May 1991). It remains a seminal event for the development of a free, independent and pluralistic press. World Press Freedom Day has its origins in the UNESCO conference in Windhoek. Below you will find the programme with the participation of the IFJ and its regions.
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
Regional Forums
The global conference is connecting with the regional World Press Freedom Day celebrations, building upon the historic series of regional seminars triggered by the 1991 Seminar in Windhoek, which inspired regional declarations to promote a free, independent, and pluralistic press, in meetings held in Alma-Ata (1992), Santiago (1994), Sana’a (1996), and Sofia (1997).
he didn t engage with why he didn t juan the fbi to interview everyone. he made representations about who he was as a young man which don t prove whether he sexual assaulted anyone, he said he was never blackout drunk, he said he was mostly volunteering and going to church. there are a lot of people who know him back then and his yearbook is ul if of references to heavy drinking, mark judge wrote multiple memoires about this. i think it calls into question his honesty and candor to represent a person that is totally different from what has been heard before and that gives democrats in thursday s hearing if it takes place an opportunity to go in on the attack. his yearbook in damning. i mean, it s damning. i m sure all of our high school yearbooks are damning, okay, but his talks about heavy drinking and it talks about, you know, there s this reference to this person or word named ronata and it turns out that there are 14 references in this georgetown prep yearbook to renate