The Guardian Australia

Daphne Caruana Galizia’s murder shows where hatred of the media can lead

- Jonathan Freedland

In the roll-call of unfashiona­ble causes, defence of the MSM – the hated “mainstream media” – surely ranks close to the top. Bashing the press is now a guaranteed applause line on both the right and left. Donald Trump, who last week said it was “frankly disgusting the press is able to write whatever they want”, and called for NBC to be stripped of its (nonexisten­t) broadcasti­ng licence, is only the most obvious example. Before him came Sarah Palin and her diatribes against “the lamestream media”.

But the MSM is a favourite target of the left too: witness the Corbynite attacks on the BBC and its political editor, Laura Kuenssberg, who famously required the protection of a bodyguard to attend the Labour party conference.

Now we have brutal evidence of where this loathing of the media can lead. On Monday, Malta’s most prominent investigat­ive journalist, Daphne Caruana Galizia, was murdered when the car she was driving was blown sky high, scattering her body parts across a field.

She has been widely described as a blogger, and she did indeed break some of her biggest stories that way. But she was also a columnist for the Malta Independen­t and its Sunday sister title (her last column appeared on Sunday, opposing the legalisati­on of cannabis). She was fiercely independen­t, even a maverick. But she was also part of the mainstream media. Indeed, her most important story, the Panama Papers and its Maltese dimension, came about through the combined heft of a network of mainstream news organisati­ons, including the Guardian.

Her murder is a timely and unwanted reminder of the risks journalist­s like Caruana Galizia take to do their job. As the Guardian notes in its editorial on the killing, the Maltese reporter is the 10th journalist to die this year. The New York Times rightly records that journalist­s have been jailed in Turkey, and murdered in Russia, India and the Philippine­s. In the US they are daily denounced as purveyors of “fake news.”

But if Caruana Galizia’s death is a reminder of the risks such reporters take, her life is a reminder of the value of their work. She performed an extraordin­ary service, ferreting out evidence that Malta had become an island mafia state, its elite riddled with corruption, money-laundering, kickbacks and gang violence.

Her counterpar­ts provide an equally essential service in their own societies. Think, for example, of the reporting of David Fahrenthol­d of the Washington Post who has been forensical­ly combing his way through the Trump finances. It was Fahrenthol­d who establishe­d that when the president says he’s given money to charity, it’s best not to take his word for it.

Fahrenthol­d is part of the reviled mainstream media, just as Caruana Galizia was. That’s worth rememberin­g next time an activist site of the far right or far left – dishing out stories that are unchecked, unsourced and, in a word, fake – slams the MSM. As Caruana Galizia’s bereaved son, Matthew, put it this week: “This is what happens when the institutio­ns of the state are left incapacita­ted: the last person left standing is often a journalist.”

• Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist

 ??  ?? A lantern with a picture of the investigat­ive journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia. Photograph: Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters
A lantern with a picture of the investigat­ive journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia. Photograph: Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters

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