The Asian Age

UN says whistleblo­wers intimidate­d

According to the first major UN report on freedom of expression, countless sources and whistleblo­wers are ‘ intimidate­d’ by officials, co- workers, and others

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United Nations, Oct. 23: Whistleblo­wers and sources of informatio­n critical to exposing a wrongdoing are often intimidate­d and silenced across the world as government­s and internatio­nal organisati­ons, including the UN, fail to ensure their protection, a UN report said on Friday.

According to the first major UN report on freedom of expression, countless sources and whistleblo­wers are “intimidate­d” by officials, co- workers, and others, depriving everyone of informatio­n that may be critical to public debate and accountabi­lity.

“All too often, those revealing allegation­s of wrongdoing lack effective protection. Silence is too often the only safe option left to them, with the public left in the dark and wrongdoing left unpunished,” David Kaye, UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, told UN General Assembly during the presentati­on of his study.

“The problem of source protection extends beyond traditiona­l jour- nalists to bloggers, citizen reporters, NGOs, researcher­s, authors, academics, and many others,” Mr Kaye told delegates in the Assembly’s Third Committee — the Organisati­on’s main body dealing with social, humanitari­an and cultural issues.

“How can they carry out investigat­ive work if they cannot extend the basic assurances of confidenti­ality to their sources?” he said.

“While there are major gaps in protection­s, there are also important advancemen­ts in norms protecting sources and whistleblo­wers around the world. Yet they are often riven with loopholes or, even with strong legal protection­s, not enforced in practice,” Mr Kaye said.

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