President Donald Trump, who has reveled in his confrontational style with the news media, sparked fierce debate Sunday over whether he is inciting
violence against journalists by posting a doctored video clip showing him bashing the head of a figure...
Not exact matches
A statement to commit
violence against a vulnerable person or group such as «heads - of - state, witnesses and confidential informants, activists, and
journalists» counts here too.
During the hearing, Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy brought up the company's role in the ongoing ethnic
violence in Myanmar, citing one incident where death threats
against a Muslim
journalist did not violate the platform's rules.
In the opinion of CADA, election threats come in different forms and may include intimidation, registering minors and foreigners, multiple registration, etc. during voter registration exercise or targeting of election officials, intimidation or harassment of
journalists, incitement to
violence in the media or public, protecting, expanding, or delineating turf or «no - go areas», attacks on election rallies or candidates, intimidation of voters to compel them to vote or stay away, physical attacks on election materials such as snatching and destruction of ballot boxes, armed clashes among political parties, violent clashes among groups of rival supporters, vandalism and physical attacks on property of opponents, targeted attacks
against specific candidates or political parties, attacks on rivals who have either won in elections or were defeated, violent street protests and efforts by armed police to maintain or restore order, tear gas, firing on protestors, attacks by protestors on property or the police, escalation and perpetuation of ethnic or sectarian
violence.
Sarah Garland, a
journalist who spent years writing about MS - 13 on Long Island, says this focus to provide aid to students rather than to go on an all - out offensive
against MS - 13 might work better to end gang
violence in Suffolk.
«We also call on the Ghanaian media and
journalists to stand up
against acts of
violence against colleagues» the MFWA said.
Journalist and Childline founder, Dame Esther Rantzen, even called out to Sony to either remove the abuse scene from the game or pull the game from sale entirely, «
Violence against children is not entertainment.
I'm a
journalist at Computerworld Australia and am reporting on Kathy Sierra's reaction to online threats of physical
violence against her.
Human rights advocates and
journalists have made the case that Facebook was being used to spread misinformation in the country, adding fuel to ethnic
violence against a Muslim minority group called the Rohingya.