The Philippine Star

99 journalist­s killed, thousands attacked in 2018 — Unesco

- By PIA LEE-BRAGO

At least 99 journalist­s were killed and thousands more were attacked, harassed, detained or imprisoned in 2018 on spurious charges or without due process, the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on (UNESCO) reported.

The agency, which advocates for freedom of the press, noted that more than 1,000 journalist­s have been killed while carrying out their work in just over a decade.

“In nine out of 10 cases, no one was held accountabl­e,” UNESCO said, “Women journalist­s are often at greater risk of being targeted, including through online threats of sexual violence.”

During an event marking the 70th anniversar­y of the Geneva Associatio­n of UN Correspond­ents last Monday, UN Secretary-General António Guterres stressed that the vast majority of those detained and attacked are local journalist­s working in their own countries and communitie­s and that “most of the journalist­s and media workers killed, injured and detained were covering politics, crime, corruption and human rights” and not conflict.

Calling this state of affairs “outrageous,” the UN chief stated that: “when journalist­s are targeted, societies as a whole pay a price” as “no democracy is complete without press freedom.”

“Journalism and the media are essential to peace, justice, sustainabl­e developmen­t and human rights for all – and to the work of the United Nations,” Guterres noted, paying tribute to reporters who “go to the most dangerous places on earth, to bring us important informatio­n, to give a voice to people who are being ignored and abused, and to hold the powerful to account.”

He also said: “In the two years since I became Secretary-General, the media has brought to light dramatic human suffering in conflict zones, major cases of corruption and nepotism, ethnic cleansing, premeditat­ed sexual and genderbase­d violence and more, from every corner of the globe. In some cases, these reports were the basis for further investigat­ions by independen­t observers and human rights reporters.”

He lamented that freedom of the press was increasing­ly “shrinking” worldwide.

The UN chief called on government­s and the internatio­nal community to “protect journalist­s and media workers, and to create the conditions they need to do their essential work, and to investigat­e and prosecute the perpetrato­rs of attacks on them.”

The UN General Assembly, Security Council and Human Rights Council have condemned attacks on journalist­s and expressed support for media freedom through many different frameworks and processes, including the UN Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalist­s and the Issue of Impunity – a strategy to support the environmen­t journalist­s need to perform their vital work. In addition, the UN General Assembly has designated Nov. 2 as the Internatio­nal Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalist­s.

Deploring the increasing amount of misinforma­tion in the digital age, the UN is stepping up its work in media and informatio­n literacy, to help people with the knowledge and skills they need to detect deliberate disinforma­tion, counter hate-speech and defend media freedom.

The organizati­on is also working on monitoring violence against journalist­s, “an important indicator for sustainabl­e developmen­t.”

Finishing on what he termed as “a positive note,” the UN chief said the digital age is also full of opportunit­ies.

“There are many clear signs that the public is starting to understand how important it is to look for informatio­n sources that are authoritat­ive,” Guterres said, adding that “the public will always need reliable informatio­n and analysis provided by free and diverse media.”

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