Malta Independent

Our work, our duty

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World Press Freedom Day has come and gone, grabbing a few headlines here and there but, overall, doing little to stimulate attention.

Perhaps the public out there is too embroiled in other issues to give two hoots on what the media is all about. Perhaps the lines between the traditiona­l media and the social media are now too blurred. Perhaps we are still to learn from the past.

The media has not been perfect in Malta. We are humans too, and we have made our mistakes. Like in any other profession, there have been occasions when a few of us did not make us proud. But, in general terms, most journalist­s love their job, carry it out with dedication, passion and a selfless search for the truth, and act as profession­als.

It is not an ideal situation to see that only 51% of people taking part in a Eurobarome­ter survey said they have trust in the media to provide reliable informatio­n, when the EU average is 63%. Probably, the fact that in Malta political parties own their own media outlets which seek to promote their side and denigrate the other greatly contribute­s towards this lack of trust.

But, even though this may sound as if we’re trying to blow our own trumpet, it must be admitted that the independen­t media in Malta has been instrument­al in uncovering scandals that have forced our institutio­ns to act. As the fourth estate, we have been capable of keeping government­s, political parties, the judiciary and all other sections of the community in check.

It is, after all, our work, our duty to do so. And we do our job in spite of the difficulti­es that we have been facing for years, which were further exacerbate­d over the past months because of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has hit us hard as it did to other sectors of the economy.

Our job has become more difficult as a result of the waves of misinforma­tion that is available on the social media, with which we have to combat each and every day. It hurts us that some people seem to think that what appears on the social media is a reflection of what is published on the traditiona­l media. They are not one and the same thing.

Our job has also become more difficult when we often find brick walls in our search for informatio­n, not least because even the Freedom of Informatio­n act has not opened all the doors that need to be opened.

Events in the past years have also served to reduce media freedom in Malta. The 2017 assassinat­ion of Daphne Caruana Galizia, apart from being a tragedy for the journalist’s family, was also an attack on journalism. Malta has consistent­ly lost places in the World Press Freedom Index, dropping from the 45th place in 2013 to the 81st position in 2020, a position retained in 2021.

What we can and will promise is that, in spite of all the obstacles that challenge us, we will continue to do our work, our duty to the best of our abilities.

 ??  ?? Kitesurfer­s glide across Lake Constance in sometimes stormy winds in Friedrichs­hafen, Germany. In the background you can see the Swiss Alps with the Säntis. Photo: Felix Kästle/dpa via AP
Kitesurfer­s glide across Lake Constance in sometimes stormy winds in Friedrichs­hafen, Germany. In the background you can see the Swiss Alps with the Säntis. Photo: Felix Kästle/dpa via AP

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