ties, tariffs and quotas for such things
as newsprint, printing equipment,
and typesetting and word processing
machinery, and taxes on the sale of
newspapers, as a prelude to their removal;
b. training of journalists and managers
and the availability of professional
training institutions and courses;
c.

legal barriers to the recognition and
effective operation of trade unions
or associations of journalists, editors
and publishers;

d. a register of available funding from
development and other agencies, the
conditions attaching to the release of
such funds, and the methods of applying for them;
e.

the state of press freedom, country by
country, in Africa.

17. In view of the importance of radio and
television in the field of news and information, the United Nations and UNESCO
are invited to recommend to the General
Assembly and the General Conference the
convening of a similar seminar of journalists and managers of radio and television
services in Africa, to explore the possibility of applying similar concepts of independence and pluralism to those media.
18. The international community should contribute to the achievement and implementation of the initiatives and projects set out
in the annex to this Declaration.
19. This Declaration should be presented by
the SecretaryGeneral of the United Nations to the United Nations General Assembly, and by the DirectorGeneral of
UNESCO to the General Conference of
UNESCO.

So This is Democracy? 2014

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Select target paragraph3