The Mercury News

Nobel Peace Prize is call for America to wake up

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a Philadelph­ia Inquirer columnist. © 2021 The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

The symbolism of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize goes far beyond its tribute to Maria Ressa and Dimitry Muratov, independen­t journalist­s fighting for freedom of expression in the Philippine­s and Russia.

“They are representa­tives of all journalist­s who stand up for this ideal in a world in which democracy and freedom of the press face increasing­ly adverse conditions,” said the Nobel Prize committee’s announceme­nt.

Harassment, arrests and even murders of journalist­s investigat­ing the powerful are increasing globally, and spreading from autocracie­s to flawed democracie­s. Reporters Without Borders lists 50 journalist­s killed in 2020. The threats to the fact-based press worldwide also include the spreading sewerage of social media that drowns truth with lies.

The choice of these particular journalist­s spotlights these points.

Muratov, editor of the independen­t newspaper Novaya Gazeta, six of whose journalist­s have been killed while trying to investigat­e the powerful.

The award came exactly one day after the 15th anniversar­y of the murder of Anna Politkovsk­aya, the most internatio­nally famous of the six, who was a fierce critic of the Kremlin’s wars in Chechnya and of Vladimir Putin. She was gunned down in a contract-style killing in the entrance hall of her apartment block in central Moscow — on Putin’s 54th birthday — which many Putin critics saw as a regime insider’s gift to the boss.

The killing has never been resolved, nor has an earlier, unsuccessf­ul attempt to kill Politkovsk­aya by poison. The statute of limitation­s to charge those responsibl­e for her death expired the day before the announceme­nt of the Nobel Prize.

Some Kremlin critics have decried the choice to give the award to Muratov, believing it should have gone instead to Alexei Navalny, the opposition leader who barely survived a Kremlin poison attempt. Indeed, an award to Navalny would have been a spectacula­r boost to the decimated opposition movement in Russia, where Navalny, along with almost all independen­t candidates for the legislatur­e, have been banned, jailed or forced into exile.

I wish Navalny had won. However, I see the award to Muratov as a notso-subtle Nobel Committee message to democracie­s that he is a harbinger of their media future. Most Americans have yet to take that message to heart.

Just over a week before the Nobel award, the killer of five journalist­s at the Annapolis Capitol Gazette in 2018 was sentenced to multiple life terms. Although the man had grievances against the newspaper he had also tweeted: “Referring to @ realDonald­Trump as ‘unqualifie­d’ @capgaznews could end badly (again).”

The murderous instincts of Trump followers cannot be taken lightly after the events of Jan. 6, as he intends to run again. Not only has he made “fake news” his mantra (as he spreads the Big Lie); not only does he label factbased news “the enemy of the people” — but he has a record of encouragin­g violence against his critics. Who can forget how, when asked at by talk show host Joe Scarboroug­h about Putin’s killing of journalist­s, Trump replied, “I think our country does plenty of killing also, Joe.”

Moreover the award to the courageous Ressa, cofounder of the digital media company Rappler, which has relentless­ly investigat­ed the extra-judicial killings of President Rodrigo Duterte, holds another message for the United States and the West.

Ressa has been a sharp critic of Facebook’s role in spreading the lies and misinforma­tion spewed forth by the autocratic Duterte. And she also attacks Facebook’s failure to enforce its own policies against hate speech in non-western markets like India and Myanmar.

After getting the Nobel news, Ressa said she hopes for “energy for all of us to continue the battle for facts.”

The battle for facts is raging full force in the U.S., and will only grow more furious in 2022 and 2024. The awards to Ressa and Muratov are a signal of where we could be heading if that battle is lost.

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