Daily Trust Sunday

Commonweal­th bodies unveil principles of media freedom

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As leaders from the 53 Commonweal­th countries fly to London for a Summit this week, six Commonweal­th organisati­ons have unveiled proposals for a 12-point Commonweal­th code of conduct aimed at reducing the heavy toll of journalist­s’ killings and other threats to the media’s right to report.

The Commonweal­th Summit will take place in London from April 16-20. The six signatory organisati­ons of the Principles are the Commonweal­th Journalist­s Associatio­n, Institute of Commonweal­th Studies, Commonweal­th Lawyers Associatio­n, Commonweal­th Legal Education Associatio­n, Commonweal­th Human Rights Initiative and Commonweal­th Parliament­ary Associatio­n UK.

“The Commonweal­th Principles on Freedom of Expression and the Role of the Media in Good Governance” were made public at the University of London’s Senate House, the home of the Institute of Commonweal­th Studies (ICWS).

“Government­s are always keen to shape the political message. Media freedom is hard won and needs constant vigilance and active defence”, said Dr Sue Onslow, Deputy Director of the Institute, who opened the meeting to mark the publicatio­n of the Principles.

Figures published by UNESCO, the UN Agency with a mandate to defend freedom of expression, show that 57 journalist­s were killed for their work in Commonweal­th countries between 2013 and 2017.

Commonweal­th Secretary-General, Patricia Scotland said last year that the number of journalist­s killed for doing their jobs represente­d “a serious indictment of our collective efforts to build a safer and more inclusive future.”

Among the widely reported cases in 2017 were the fatal shooting of editor and journalist Gauri Lankesh in India in September and the car bombing in October that killed investigat­ive journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia in Malta, the current chairin-office of the Commonweal­th.

“Media freedom is in peril”, said Mahendra Ved, President of the Commonweal­th Journalist­s Associatio­n. “The Commonweal­th should now demonstrat­e the will to defend it through actions, not just words; I believe these guidelines can help to make the commitment­s real.”

The Principles are freedom of expression, restrictio­ns on freedom of expression, access to informatio­n, parliament­s and the media, judiciarie­s and the media, the role of media in elections and the safety of journalist­s. The rest are media self-regulation and complaints, media regulation, observance of these principles and upholding Commonweal­th values.

The document reflects internatio­nal standards and best practice with regard to the relationsh­ips between the media and the three branches of government, effective protection­s for the independen­ce of the media and its role in informing the public, the media’s respect for accuracy and fairness, and promoting member states’ observance of the principles.

Desmond Browne QC, who represente­d the Commonweal­th Lawyers Associatio­n on the Working Group, said: “The CLA has been proud to play a part in drafting these important Principles. The intention is that they should provide a universal Code for the Commonweal­th which will protect both freedom of expression and the activities of responsibl­e journalist­s.”

The publisher of Africa Today, Kayode Soyinka, was present at the launch of the Principles. Soyinka said: “As a letter-bomb survivor and victim of the most gruesome attack on media freedom in my country, Nigeria, I support the Commonweal­th Media Principles. The time has come for the Commonweal­th to prove its relevance as a true champion of democratic values.”

The six Commonweal­th organisati­ons which are jointly putting forward the Principles say they want them to be adopted by the Commonweal­th as a “manual of good practice” to assist government­s, legislatur­es, judiciarie­s and the media to contribute in appropriat­e ways to promoting open, democratic and accountabl­e societies, in accordance with Commonweal­th values.

 ??  ?? A CPJ delegation meets with European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans, second from left. (CPJ)
A CPJ delegation meets with European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans, second from left. (CPJ)

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