briefing on crop production figures before the public release of information at noon. • Biweekly press briefings from the
International Monetary Fund are typically embargoed until 10:30 a.m. Washington time, 1430 GMT (for synchronised effect on global stock markets). • Reporters who accompanied U.S. President
George W. Bush on a
Thanksgiving visit to Iraq in 2003 were embargoed from filing until the President left the country. They were told that, in the interests of security, the trip would be canceled if news broke before its conclusion. • The
Ministry of Defence in the
United Kingdom informed a small number of journalism outlets that
Prince Harry would be serving in
Afghanistan, on condition that the information not be released until the end of his deployment. The information was leaked after about two months, and officials agreed to end the embargo. The prince was immediately removed from the battlefield, reportedly for his safety and that of his fellow soldiers. • In
Canada,
Australia and other countries, prior to the release of the
budget and other important government announcements, reporters are held in a "lockup" so that they can prepare stories in advance. They are not permitted to file until after the official announcement (for example, after the Minister of Finance rises to deliver the budget speech). Lockups are particularly aimed at preventing
insider trading on the basis of leaked government announcements. It is uncertain if a similar lockup is done in the United States when the
Federal Reserve Board is preparing to adjust an interest rate. •
The New York Times in 2008 prompted suppression of the story of the
kidnapping of David Rohde (their reporter) in news outlets and on Wikipedia until his return in 2009. This example, in which the instigator of the embargo is not the source, may be a case of
self-censorship instead. == On articles in scientific journals ==