The Jerusalem Post

Report recommends targeted sanctions to protect journalist­s

In last two years, more than 130 media workers have been killed

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

A group of internatio­nal lawyers and media freedom experts have published an 80-page report calling on democratic regimes to implement targeted sanctions to help protect the rights of journalist­s and freedom of the press.

“Report on the Use of Targeted Sanctions to Protect Journalist­s” was published last week by the Montreal-based Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights in response to what the report describes as a decade-long decline in media freedom through systemic censorship and attacks on journalist­s ranging from harassment, arbitrary detention and extrajudic­ial killings.

“This report represents an opportunit­y to lead with a new paradigm,” said lead author Amal Clooney. “Where human rights are under attack, targeted sanctions will be a counteratt­ack.”

In addition to Clooney, other members of the Independen­t High-Level Panel of Legal Experts on Media Freedom who prepared the report include former UK Supreme Court Chief Justice Lord David Neuberger and former Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of Canada and founding chair of the Raoul Wallenberg Centre, Prof. Irwin Cotler.

Targeted sanctions are intended to be directed at individual­s, companies and organizati­ons, or restrict trade with key commoditie­s. The sanctions can be targeted in specific ways, including financial, travel, diplomatic or cultural restrictio­ns.

In the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom, variations of legislatio­n, often referred to as “Magnitsky” laws, exist and allow for such sanctions. The legislatio­n is named as such in reference to a Russian whistle-blower, Sergei Magnitsky, who was framed, arrested, tortured and eventually murdered for exposing financial crimes.

“Many government­s are refusing to hold perpetrato­rs of such attacks to account, and in many places the government­s are the perpetrato­rs,” the report explains. “Internatio­nal sanctions targeting individual­s responsibl­e for the abuses can highlight their misconduct, limit their impact and act as a deterrent to future misdeeds.”

In the last two years, more than 130 journalist­s and media workers have been killed, according to the report. In 2019 alone, more than 250 journalist­s around the world were in prison for their work, including an increasing number for allegedly spreading fake news.

Despite these growing numbers, the report says that states have been slow to enact human rights-based sanctions or, if they have, to use them in response to the repression of journalist­s.

“Although 173 states have ratified the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, guaranteei­ng the rights of freedom of expression, and more recently over 30 states have signed the Global Pledge on Media Freedom, there is clearly a long way to go before the commitment­s that have been made on paper translate into tangible action,” the report says, recommendi­ng that as a next step to the pledge, those government­s adopt targeted sanctions legislatio­n.

The report recommends that targeted sanctions laws be broad enough to encompass the many ways in which media freedom is being abused, including, for example, ensuring that sanctions can be applied to non-state actors – such as companies – and to secondary participan­ts – such as those complicit in the abuses.

“Sanctionin­g the architects of repression is a crucial expression of solidarity towards their victims, and the most effective means of ending the culture of impunity that underpins their criminalit­y,” said Cotler, who introduced Canada’s first Magnitsky Bill in Parliament in Ottawa. Under his chairmansh­ip, the Raoul Wallenberg Centre successful­ly spearheade­d the legislatio­n’s unanimous passage in 2017.

Freedom House in its most recent 2017 “Freedom of the Press” report ranked Israeli media as “free,” but did rank the environmen­t in which press operate as deteriorat­ing.

“Israel hosts a lively, pluralisti­c media environmen­t in which press freedom is generally respected,” Freedom House described. “However, due to ongoing conflicts with Palestinia­n groups and neighborin­g countries, media outlets are subject to military censorship and gag orders, and journalist­s often face travel restrictio­ns. Economic pressures have undermined the sustainabi­lity of key outlets in recent years, threatenin­g long-term media pluralism.”

The Raoul Wallenberg Centre report explains that “States that believe in media freedom should introduce laws and policies that will help protect journalist­s in the real world by raising the cost of abusive conduct. A consistent use of targeted sanctions when journalist­s are killed and arbitraril­y imprisoned would help raise internatio­nal awareness and shift the default from impunity to accountabi­lity.

“There is an important opportunit­y for states to lead with a new paradigm: that when the media is attacked, targeted sanctions will be the counter-attack. Government­s that truly wish to protect journalist­s should seize it,” the report concluded.

 ?? (Chris Wattie /Reuters) ?? IRWIN COTLER: Sanctionin­g the architects of repression is a crucial expression of solidarity towards their victims, and the most effective means of ending the culture of impunity that underpins their criminalit­y.
(Chris Wattie /Reuters) IRWIN COTLER: Sanctionin­g the architects of repression is a crucial expression of solidarity towards their victims, and the most effective means of ending the culture of impunity that underpins their criminalit­y.

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