Freedom of the Press/History/Country sources/Palau: Difference between revisions

From
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(transformed)
 
(transformed)
 
Line 7: Line 7:
|breakout=Palau
|breakout=Palau
|contents=
|contents=
Article IV, Section 2 of Palau’s [[Probable year::1981]]  Constitution protects press freedom: “The government shall take no action to deny or impair the freedom of expression or press. No bona fide reporter may be required by the government to divulge or be jailed for refusal to divulge information obtained in the course of a professional investigation" (Constitute Project, “Palau’s Constitution of [[Probable year::1981]]  with Amendments through [[Probable year::1992]]” ).
Article IV, Section 2 of Palau’s [[Probable year:: 1981]]  Constitution protects press freedom: “The government shall take no action to deny or impair the freedom of expression or press. No bona fide reporter may be required by the government to divulge or be jailed for refusal to divulge information obtained in the course of a professional investigation" (Constitute Project, “Palau’s Constitution of [[Probable year:: 1981]]  with Amendments through [[Probable year:: 1992]]” ).




}}
}}

Latest revision as of 22:18, 28 December 2022

What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?

Palau

Article IV, Section 2 of Palau’s 1981 Constitution protects press freedom: “The government shall take no action to deny or impair the freedom of expression or press. No bona fide reporter may be required by the government to divulge or be jailed for refusal to divulge information obtained in the course of a professional investigation" (Constitute Project, “Palau’s Constitution of 1981 with Amendments through 1992” ).