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Arnold Amber The Newspaper Guild President Mori Abdolalian CJFE Journalists in Exile Alison Armstrong Journalist/writer Bob Carty CBC-Radio "The Sunday Edition" Alice Klein Now Magazine Donald Livingstone Promeus Anita Mielewcyzk Journalist/Law Student John Norris Criminal lawyer Mary Deanne Shears Journalist Kelly Toughill King's College, Nova Scotia Anna Maria Tremonti CBC Radio "The Current" Philip Tunley Lawyer, Stockwoods LLP |
Fund for the Family of Slain Afghan Journalist Javed "Jojo' YazamyWe would like to thank all of the donors who have given so far. They include 25 individual donors, and one organization, CTV News, who gave a significant gift. With the combined online and offline gifts, we are now just $1,916 from our goal of $15,000. We believe that with your help in the last three weeks of July, we will reach that goal.
Just a reminder that any funds above that amount will go to The Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) for journalism training projects in Afghanistan. In March of this year, the Canadian press corps lost a friend and colleague in Kandahar, Afghanistan. Only months after being released from a U.S. prison in Bagram, Javed 'Jojo' Yazamy was murdered in Kandahar city. Jojo was a fixer, primarily for CTV, but known to every reporter in southern Afghanistan as fearless, determined and passionate about telling the story of this war and its impact on his family and those he considered adopted family, Canadians.
Jojo considered Canadians as his brothers and sisters. There was nothing he wouldn't do for us, and now we want to honour that. With your support, we hope to raise $15,000 to help ease some of the crushing financial burden faced by his family. DETAILS ABOUT HOW TO DONATE To donate, please click on the Canada Helps Giving Link Any money raised over our target will be given to the Institute for War and Peace Reporting to run training seminars for Afghan journalists in Jojo's memory. While the primary goal of this campaign is to support Jojo's family, we're also keenly aware that his death has left a large hole in Afghan journalism and there's no better way to pay tribute to what he's done than to ensure there are others to follow in his footsteps. Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) will be collecting funds through Canada Helps for the family of Jojo until July 31, 2009. We thank you very much for donating to this fund, and ask you to spread the word to others who knew Jojo or who wish to honour the work of all the fixers who work with Canadian journalists around the world. Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) is an association of more than 300 journalists, editors, publishers, producers, students and others who work to promote and defend free expression and press freedom in Canada and abroad.
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