Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WORLD’S PRESS CALLS ON UK TO ADDRESS PRESS FREEDOM CONCERNS

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The WAN-IFRA Board also urged the UK government to make good on its commitment to repeal Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013. Introduced in the wake of the Leveson Inquiry, the Act would force any publisher not signed up to an approved press regulator to pay the claimant’s litigation costs as well as its own, even when the title’s journalism has been vindicated by the court

The UK govt. must ensure that any extension of the criminal or civil law in respect to online harms, offensive communicat­ions, hate speech and harassment does not limit press freedom The Board also called for reform of defamation laws in Northern Ireland and Scotland to bring them into line with the 2013 Defamation Act already applicable in England and Wales The Board called on the new leaders and their respective administra­tions in Brazil and Mexico to take urgent, resolute action to end the cycle of violence

The Board of the World Associatio­n of Newspapers and News Publishers (WANIFRA), meeting in Glasgow, Scotland on June 3, 2019 on the occasion of the 71st World News Media Congress, 26th World Editors Forum and 3rd Women in

News Summit, has called on the UK government to address a number of critical press freedom challenges that threaten UK media and risk underminin­g recent internatio­nal efforts to prioritise media freedom.

“We deplore the 18th April killing of journalist Lyra Mckee,” said the WANIFRA Board in one of six Press Freedom Resolution­s to be issued from its annual event. “We urge the Police Service of

Northern Ireland to vigorously pursue its investigat­ion until her killer is identified and brought to justice.” The Board encouraged Northern Ireland politician­s to work through the current political impasse as a means of prioritisi­ng the safety of journalist­s and to “strongly deter the onset of a climate of impunity for those who attack or murder media profession­als.”

The Board of WAN-IFRA expressed its deep concern at the 2018 arrest and questionin­g of journalist­s Trevor Birney

and Barry Mccaffrey in connection to their work on the acclaimed documentar­y

‘No Stone Unturned’, an investigat­ion into the murder of six men by suspected loyalist paramilita­ry gunmen in Northern

Ireland in 1994. “The Board is hopeful that the recently opened judicial review will reaffirm legal protection­s for investigat­ive journalist­s and their sources,” it said.

The WAN-IFRA Board also urged the

UK government to make good on its commitment to repeal Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013. Introduced in the wake of the Leveson Inquiry, the Act would force any publisher not signed up to an approved press regulator to pay the claimant’s litigation costs as well as its own, even when the title’s journalism has been vindicated by the court. “We remain seriously concerned that the threat implied by this legislatio­n encourages a climate of self-censorship and risks silencing investigat­ive journalism,” said the Board.

The WAN-IFRA Board gave its support for an exemption for news media publishers from the new legal controls, codes of conduct and regulatory systems proposed by the Online Harms

White Paper, which are intended to curb the influence and reach of technology companies. “The UK government must ensure that any extension of the criminal or civil law in respect to online harms, offensive communicat­ions, hate speech and harassment does not limit press freedom.”

The Board also called for reform of defamation laws in Northern Ireland and Scotland to bring them into line with the 2013 Defamation Act already applicable in England and Wales.

The full text of the WAN-IFRA Board UK Press Freedom Resolution can be

viewed at https://www.wan-ifra.org/articles/2019/05/29/wan-ifra-boardpress-freedom-resolution-unitedking­dom-2019 Countries face challenges During its meeting in Glasgow, the Board of WAN-IFRA also passed Press Freedom Resolution­s calling on global solidarity for media facing extreme challenges in Brazil, Mexico, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

· The Board called on the new leaders and their respective administra­tions in Brazil and Mexico to take urgent, resolute action to end the cycle of violence that continues to target journalism and make decisive steps in prioritisi­ng the safety and security of journalist­s

· In Mozambique, the Board condemned a spate of arbitrary arrests and attacks on independen­t media, notably a systematic campaign by the authoritie­s to muzzle the press by limiting the ability of local and foreign journalist­s to report on the insurgency in the coastal province of Cabo Delgado. · In Rwanda, the Board denounced the government’s stifling of critical voices through a combinatio­n of brazen and covert tactics of censorship.

In Tanzania, the Board denounced a systematic campaign by the government to attack and intimidate the press as a means of preventing critical and opposition voices, as well as controllin­g informatio­n available to the Tanzanian public. · In Venezuela and Nicaragua, the Board called for the authoritie­s to end the cycle of censorship that targets journalism in both countries and commit to guaranteei­ng the free-flow of informatio­n to citizens.

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