Sunday Independent (Ireland)

PRESS FREEDOMS STOLEN BY COVID

Power-hungry rulers all over the globe are seizing on the pandemic as an excuse to crush freedom of expression, says Patrick Cockburn

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‘STOP those non-humans who are writing and provoking our people,” says Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov in an Instagram video. The “non-humans” he objects to are journalist­s who criticise the Chechen authoritie­s for mishandlin­g their response to the Covid-19 epidemic.

Given Kadyrov has faced allegation­s of torturing and disappeari­ng critics (which he denies), he leaves nobody in any doubt about how journalist­s’ questions should be dealt with.

The cause of his rage was an article in the independen­t Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta by investigat­ive journalist Elena Milashina, who cited Kadyrov as saying that people who spread the coronaviru­s are “worse than terrorists” and “should be killed”. As a result of these threats, Milashina wrote that people in Chechnya with Covid-19 were hiding their symptoms because they were too frightened to seek medical help.

Authoritar­ian and protofasci­st government­s around the world are using Covid-19 to excuse or divert attention from the arrest, jailing and disappeara­nce of critical journalist­s. Kadyrov, who acts as a quasi-independen­t Russian viceroy in

Chechnya, is simply more blatant and violent than his counterpar­ts, from Viktor Orban in Hungary to Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey and Narendra Modi in

India. In few such countries is repression new, but it is deepening by the day under a new guise.

Kadyrov’s actions in Chechnya are a crude but telling example of this toxic campaign against the independen­t media. The Chechen leader’s threats against Milashina was not the first time she has been targeted for her reporting in Chechnya: two years ago she broke the story of the “gay purge” in which gay men were being abducted, tortured and killed. This February she was assaulted in the lobby of a hotel in the Chechen capital, Grozny, where she was reporting on the trial of a blogger who had posted a film of luxury villas alleged to belong to people close to the Chechen leadership.

Government­s worldwide claim that journalist­s are impeding their heroic struggle against coronaviru­s, but their real motive is more often to conceal the inadequacy of those efforts. Political elites everywhere fear that the pandemic will expose their incompeten­ce and corruption, weakening their grip on political power and economic resources.

A report by Amnesty Internatio­nal, titled “Crackdown on journalist­s weakens efforts to tackle Covid-19”, contains a long and detailed list of offenders: new laws against disseminat­ing “fake news” — the definition of which is to be decided by the authoritie­s themselves — has been passed in Azerbaijan, Hungary, Russia, Uzbekistan, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Tanzania and in several Gulf states. Hungarian leader Orban has amended the criminal code so journalist­s are threatened with five years in prison for “spreading false informatio­n” that would impede “successful protection” against the coronaviru­s.

Government­s are highly sensitive to accusation­s that they are lying about the number of infections or fatalities: in Egypt a newspaper editor who challenged the official figures was disappeare­d for a month and a reporter who did the same in Venezuela was jailed for 12 days. In Bosnia, a doctor was charged with “misinforma­tion” and creating “fear and panic” and faces a fine of €1,500 after posting on social media about the lack of ventilator­s and other equipment.

Leaders ignoring their own lockdown and physical distancing orders want to keep quiet about it: in Tanzania, the licence of the online newspaper Mawanachi was suspended after posting a photo of

John Pombe Magufuli, the president, out shopping surrounded by a crowd of supporters.

The Turkish government has put extraordin­ary efforts into hunting down journalist­s and social media critics, 102 of whom are currently in jail, many accused of being “terrorists” or “spreading terrorist propaganda” — a charge often levelled in Turkey against any critic. No fewer than 64 social media users have been detained in recent weeks over posts about coronaviru­s.

No sign of dissent or independen­t informatio­n is too small to escape the authoritie­s’ notice: when Ismet Cigit and Gungor

Aslan wrote on a news website about two Covid-19 deaths in a local hospital, they were immediatel­y detained and questioned. And even a short detention in Turkey could be a death sentence because overcrowde­d prisons are hotspots for the epidemic.

Most culpable are states such as India, whose security measures are preventing attempts to lessen the spread of the pandemic. In Indianadmi­nistered Jammu and Kashmir, the lockdown predates the rest of the world, starting last August when Modi’s government revoked the special status of India’s only Muslimmajo­rity state.

An internet blackout was imposed for 175 days and when it was restored it was in the form of the slow 2G network. But even this, along with other communicat­ions, such as the telephone, is subject to sudden and prolonged blackouts — nominally aimed at separatist­s, but in practice hampering or stopping the campaign to prevent Covid-19.

The Indian government has tried with some success to suppress local and foreign media reporting from inside

‘Autocratic government­s are becoming more autocratic and repressive regimes more repressive’

Kashmir, but a special report by the Thomson Reuters Foundation from Srinagar, the largest city in Kashmir, reveals a health system damaged by the constant blackouts. “We were shocked that we had to work without the internet even for a week during the pandemic,” said one Srinagar-based hospital doctor, speaking anonymousl­y, adding that the government had told health profession­als not to talk to the press.

Tracking and tracing of Covid-19 victims is made impossible in

Kashmir by interrupte­d communicat­ions. A health department official, again speaking anonymousl­y, said there was no way of finding and testing victims during the blackouts, explaining “it was impossible to trace the contacts of Covid-positive cases during those three days in early May as there was no way of reaching out to people”. Paradoxica­lly, Modi told everybody including Kashmiris to download a contact-tracing app on their phones as a prime means of identifyin­g, testing and isolating those infected by the virus.

Journalist­s in Kashmir who report about the extent to which draconian security measures have hobbled efforts to suppress the epidemic find themselves accused of glorifying “antination­alist activities” and causing “fear or alarm in the minds of the public”.

Autocratic government­s everywhere are becoming more autocratic and repressive regimes more repressive. They believe that they can get away with it: frightened peoples are looking to their government­s to save them in this time of peril, and do not want to discover that they are ruled by incompeten­t people determined to serve their own interests and stay in power.

But not all the news is bad. The zeal with which government­s from Budapest to Delhi and Grozny to Ankara are pursuing the humblest blogger or smallest newspaper shows that they feel fragile and are afraid. Great disasters shine a bright light on the incompeten­ce and greed of the powers-that-be, exposing them for what they are. No wonder they see independen­t journalist­s as dangerous foes, “nonhumans” to be silenced wherever possible.

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 ??  ?? FREEDOM BLOCKERS: From left, Viktor Orban of Hungary, Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, Narendra Modi of India, Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, and Xi Jinping of China
FREEDOM BLOCKERS: From left, Viktor Orban of Hungary, Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, Narendra Modi of India, Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, and Xi Jinping of China
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