PRESS CENSORSHIP
■s. — REIMPOSED IN RUSSIA. By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright. MOSCOW, December 29. The Government has reimposed the censorship on Press dispatches, which was abolished last March. DRYING UP OF NEWS. FOREIGN JOURNALISTS’ VIEWS. (Received This Day, 9.5 a.m.) LONDON, December 29. The Associated Press of Great Britain's Moscow correspondent says foreign journalists there believe the reinstatement of the censorship means the drying up of news from Russia. Their work has been closely watched since the censorship was restored. Correspondents sending despatches displeasing the Soviet Government were quickly reprimanded. The Moscow Press, since the signing of the SovietGerman Pact, repeatedly complained of the British, French and American treatment of Soviet affairs and has been quick to attack the papers concerned. Reliable news will now probably be scarcer than ever.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 30 December 1939, Page 6
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128PRESS CENSORSHIP Wairarapa Times-Age, 30 December 1939, Page 6
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