Malta Independent

News organizati­ons highlight most threatened journalist­s

- ■ Thomas Awah Junior,

A coalition of more than a dozen global news organizati­ons, including The Associated Press, The Financial Times and Reuters, will spotlight the world’s most threatened journalist­s in a new freedom of speech initiative, the group announced yesterday in New York.

Members of the One Free Press Coalition will publish on their platforms each month a “10 Most Urgent” list of journalist­s who have been jailed, threatened or attacked for their work.

The group’s mission is to use the voices of its members to “stand up for journalist­s under attack for pursuing the truth,” the organisati­on said.

Among the first group of journalist­s the coalition is spotlighti­ng are the late Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed in October 2018 by Saudi agents at the country’s consulate in Istanbul, and Maria Ressa, the founder of the news site Rappler who has faced arrest and legal threats in the Philippine­s.

AP Executive Editor Sally Buzbee praised the effort as a way to bring attention to “the vital cause of reporting without harassment or threat.”

“Journalism is under attack around the world,” Buzbee said. “We believe journalist­s must be permitted to pursue facts fearlessly for the greater good of society and democracy, and we are happy that the One Free Press Coalition will join us in that fight.”

Other coalition members include EURACTIV, Forbes, HuffPost, Le Temps, Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung, Time, Wired and Yahoo News.

The importance of a free press is seen daily around the world, especially in countries ruled by authoritar­ian regimes, said Wolfgang Krach, Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung editor-in-chief.

“Intimidati­on, violence, incendiary speech against journalist­s and preventing reporters from doing their jobs are crucial issues for our profession in these times,” Krach said.

The group’s reach, including online and on social media, will allow it to signal its solidarity for journalism colleagues and simultaneo­usly tell those who threaten free speech that they are being watched, said Randall Lane, Forbes’ chief content officer who championed the concept of the coalition at a meeting of the Internatio­nal Media Council at the World Economic Forum.

“With the One Free Press Coalition, we are shining an enduring light from all corners of the globe on our fellow journalist­s who are being persecuted, punished or worse in the pursuit of truth,” Lane said.

Other coalition partners include the Committee to Protect Journalist­s and the Internatio­nal Women’s Media Foundation.

The other journalist­s whose stories are being highlighte­d Friday are:

• Eman Al Nafjan, a women’s rights blogger who has been imprisoned in Saudi Arabia. • • • • • Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, journalist­s for Reuters who have been imprisoned in Myanmar.

Claudia Duque, a Colombian investigat­ive reporter who has been attacked and harassed for her work.

Mohamed Cheikh Ould Mohamed, a blogger who has been imprisoned in Mauritania.

Anna Nimiriano, the editor of the Juba Monitor newspaper in South Sudan who has faced repeated threats of arrest.

Pelin Unker, a Turkish journalist who wrote about the Paradise Papers investigat­ion who has been jailed.

• a correspond­ent for Afrik 2 Radio and publisher of Aghem Messenger magazine who has been imprisoned in Cameroon.

• Tran Thi Nga, a Vietnamese human rights blogger who has been sentenced on charges of “spreading propaganda.” Pelin Unker (photo) is visiting Malta today at the invitation of Nationalis­t MEP David Casa. She will be travelling on her own after her husband and baby were refused an entry visa. The Maltese government said, “members of the family of Unker were not granted a visa given a previous decision which was already taken by another Schengen member state, whose authoritie­s rejected similar applicatio­ns by the same individual­s.”

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Pelin Unker

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