Fiji Sun

NEED FOR JOURNALIST­S TO REPORT FREELY AND SAFELY

MORE THAN SEVEN OUT OF 10 WOMEN REPORTERS SURVEYED HAVE EXPERIENCE­D ONLINE VIOLENCE. The advent of online platforms has called into question the economic viability of independen­t and pluralisti­c media, upending existing value chains and business models.

- by Audrey Azoulay Director-General of UNESCO ■ The following is a message from the Director-General of United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on (UNESCO) on World Press Freedom Day. Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

Whether in the context of COVID-19 or during war and conflict, reliable informatio­n is more than necessary: it is vital.

Journalist­s play an essential role in providing this informatio­n. They assess, investigat­e and disseminat­e facts, ensuring people can make informed decisions.

Journalism is therefore a public good, which we must defend and support as such.

Yet even as the United Nations marks the 10th anniversar­y of its Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalist­s and the Issue of Impunity, which UNESCO is proud to lead, journalist­s are facing a fast-evolving environmen­t.

As our newest World Trends in Freedom of Expression and Media Developmen­t report shows, more than five in six people around the world live in a country that experience­d a decline in press freedom over the past five years. Some 400 journalist­s were killed during the same period just for doing their jobs.

Digital technologi­es

Digital technologi­es are further revolution­ising this landscape. They have permitted unpreceden­ted exchanges of informatio­n, supporting journalism across borders. We can now see what happens in any corner of the world, at any time.

But these opportunit­ies come with new challenges. The advent of online platforms has called into question the economic viability of independen­t and pluralisti­c media, upending existing value chains and business models.

The digital era has also put media workers and their sources at greater risk of being targeted, harassed and attacked – for instance, due to data retention, spyware and digital surveillan­ce.

Expression­s of hatred against journalist­s have spiralled, affecting women journalist­s in particular. Our research shows that more than seven out of ten women reporters surveyed have experience­d online violence.

And as few of these technologi­es are regulated transparen­tly and with accountabi­lity, perpetrato­rs of violence operate with impunity, often without leaving a trace.

This must end. Technologi­cal advances need to be underpinne­d by respect for the freedom, privacy and safety of journalist­s.

Social media networks must especially do more to tackle rampant disinforma­tion and hate speech, while protecting freedom of expression.

UNESCO is firmly committed to these goals.

To rise to emerging challenges, UNESCO supported the adoption of a new Windhoek Declaratio­n for Informatio­n as a Public Good in the digital age, thirty years after the first, at last year’s World Press Freedom Conference in Namibia.

Since then, UNESCO has been implementi­ng the Declaratio­n by promoting new transparen­cy principles for online platforms, undertakin­g research into sustainabl­e media business models and putting a new focus on media and informatio­n literacy in education systems.

But we all must do more to address the risks and seize the opportunit­ies of the digital age.

On this World Press Freedom Day, I invite Member States, technology companies, the media community, as well as the rest of civil society to come together to develop a new digital configurat­ion – one that protects both journalism and journalist­s.

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