Millennium Post

Killing of journalist­s outrageous and should not be new normal: UN chief

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UNITED NATIONS: The killing of journalist­s around the world for doing their job is "outrageous" and should not become the "new normal," UN chief Antonio Guterres said.

In just over a decade, some 1,010 journalist­s have been killed for reporting the news, and in nine out of 10 cases, the perpetrato­rs are never brought to justice. In 2018 alone, at least 88 journalist­s have been killed according to the UN.

Many thousands more have been "attacked, harassed, detained or imprisoned on spurious charges, without due process," Guterres said in a video message for The Internatio­nal Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalist­s, marked annually on November 2.

Secretary-general Guterres paid tribute to the reporters in the field "who do their jobs every day despite intimidati­on and threats."

And he called on the internatio­nal community "to protect journalist­s and create the conditions they need to do their work."

To mark the Internatio­nal Day, the UN Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on (UNESCO) is launching an initiative to fuel awareness on the issue of journalist­s killed on the job. Called "Truth Never Dies," it encourages people to share stories by and about fallen journalist­s to keep their legacies alive and to push for investigat­ions into their deaths to be continued.

"The truth never dies. And neither must our commitment to the fundamenta­l right to freedom of expression, the UN chief said, highlighti­ng that when journalist­s are attacked "societies as a whole pay a price."

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