National Post (National Edition)

PM highlights importance of press freedom

`Democracy in danger' with recent events

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau highlighte­d the work of journalist­s working under pressure in Hong Kong and Belarus at Monday's internatio­nal conference on media freedom.

Canada has been vocal in condemning the clampdowns on democracy and free expression by the Chinese government in the former British colony of Hong Kong and the fraudulent presidenti­al election in Belarus that has given rise to pro-democracy protests.

“Today, we see citizens calling for change, from Hong Kong to Belarus, only to have the authoritie­s attack the freedom of the press,” Trudeau told the conference co-hosted by Canada and Botswana on Monday.

Trudeau denounced the imprisonme­nt of Reuters journalist­s Kyaw Soe Oo and Wa Lone for reporting on military atrocities committed against the Rohingya people in Myanmar, and of Philippine journalist Maria Ressa.

The Reuters journalist­s have since gained freedom and have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize. In June, Ressa was convicted of “cyber libel” and sentenced to six years behind bars after complaints from her country's strongman president, Rodrigo Duterte, and other officials from his government.

“It is never acceptable for a journalist to be attacked for doing their job,” said Trudeau.

“A crackdown on the media puts democracy in danger. It puts lives in danger.”

At the same event, a coalition of internatio­nal lawyers, led by a former Canadian attorney general, called for a new global charter to protect the rights of imprisoned journalist­s in an increasing­ly hostile world.

Irwin Cotler, the former Liberal justice minister and internatio­nal human rights lawyer, made the recommenda­tion in a report he wrote for a coalition of independen­t internatio­nal legal experts.

The new charter would upgrade legal obligation­s on a country that arbitraril­y imprisons a journalist and impose new legal duties on the home country of a journalist who has been rounded up.

Cotler says the new measures are needed because the current internatio­nal laws designed to protect diplomatic access to people imprisoned in foreign countries are not adequate.

“We meet today on the occasion not only of a global COVID pandemic, but a global political pandemic, characteri­zed by a resurgent global authoritar­ianism, the backslidin­g of democracie­s and global assaults on media freedom, where journalist­s are increasing­ly under threat and under assault,” Cotler told the video conference.

“Although some states already do this to some extent, the system is haphazard and weak,” said Amal Clooney, an internatio­nal human rights lawyer who has represente­d imprisoned journalist­s

Cotler and Clooney say the COVID-19 pandemic has emboldened authoritar­ian government­s and created new risks to journalist­s working internatio­nally.

“So the report proposes a new charter of rights for detained journalist­s and a new code of conduct for government­s to be overseen by a newly appointed internatio­nal commission­er who would be tasked with monitoring states compliance,” said Clooney.

Clooney and Cotler are the leading figures on a panel created last year by the Canadian and British government­s to find ways to increase protection to journalist­s and prevent abuses of media freedom.

Trudeau called the work of their committee “a great example of the power of working together — as civil society, government, and global organizati­ons — to stand up for the kind of future we all want to build.”

Neither Trudeau nor Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne, who chaired the daylong meeting, veered close to addressing the abuse that American journalist­s have had to endure during the presidency of Donald Trump, who has called journalist­s the “enemy of the people.”

An American journalist who questioned Champagne during the event's closing teleconfer­ence asked the minister if he had any advice for her colleagues who recently covered large events with people “not doing the COVID-19 thing with their mask” while being harassed and called fake news.

Champagne was also asked to address the periodic media freedom issues that arise in Canada, including a September incident that saw the Ontario Provincial Police contact an Indigenous journalist in Caledonia, Ont., to tell him he was facing charges of mischief and disobeying a court order.

Champagne said he wasn't aware of the specifics of the Caledonia incident.

 ?? YE AUNG THU / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has pointed to the case of Reuters journalist­s Kyaw Soe Oo, left and Wa Lone while emphasizin­g the importance of importance of a free press. The pair were jailed in Myanmar for reporting
on atrocities during country's Rohinga crisis, but have since been freed and awarded a Pulitzer Prize.
YE AUNG THU / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has pointed to the case of Reuters journalist­s Kyaw Soe Oo, left and Wa Lone while emphasizin­g the importance of importance of a free press. The pair were jailed in Myanmar for reporting on atrocities during country's Rohinga crisis, but have since been freed and awarded a Pulitzer Prize.

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