Taipei Times

Taipei plays host to celebratio­n of Human Rights Press Awards for Asia

Taiwan’s commitment to freedom of the press has made it home to 176 correspond­ents from 86 media outlets from 22 countries, Tsai Ing-wen said

- BY LIU TZU-HSUAN STAFF REPORTER

The Human Rights Press Awards for Asia yesterday hosted its annual ceremony in Taiwan for the first time, celebratin­g journalism and human rights in a nation ranked best in Asia for press freedom.

Taiwan boasts freedom of the press and has become an important hub for internatio­nal media, being home to 176 correspond­ents from 86 media outlets from 22 countries as of last month, President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) said at the event in Taipei.

However, authoritar­ian regimes are constantly attempting to influence the nation’s media environmen­t and democracy, and polarize Taiwanese society through disinforma­tion campaigns and propaganda, Tsai said.

It takes all sectors of society to act together to combat disinforma­tion with timely and transparen­t clarificat­ion, research on authoritar­ian informatio­n manipulati­on and media literacy lessons, she said.

“Taiwan will continue to stand up for democracy, freedom and human rights,” she said.

Taiwan Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club president Thompson Chau (周浩霖) called on the government to “remain committed to press freedom, provide more access and ease regulation­s on foreign media workers.”

The winners and runners-up this year were announced on Thursday last week — to mark World Press Freedom Day the following day.

The organizers — Human Rights Watch, the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communicat­ion at Arizona State University, the Reynolds Center for Business Journalism, and the foreign correspond­ents’ clubs in Taiwan and Thailand — present the awards to “increase respect for people’s basic rights and to focus attention on threats to those freedoms.”

The awards were given in seven categories: Investigat­ive Writing (English), Investigat­ive Writing (Chinese), Photograph­y, Multimedia, Documentar­y Video, Podcast and Newsroom in Exile, with the final two being new additions this year.

Winners included the Guardian, which earned the Investigat­ive Writing (English) award for its reporting on alleged traffickin­g of workers at Amazon.com warehouses in Saudi Arabia; and Singapore-based Initium Media, which won the Chineselan­guage award; and al-Jazeera, which won in the Multimedia category for its “If I die, I die: Pakistan’s death-trap route to Europe” report.

Zan Times and Frontier Myanmar — which was also honored in the Podcast category — won in the Newsroom in Exile category for their “Despair is settling in: Female suicides on rise in Taliban’s Afghanista­n” and “Religious minorities persecuted in Myanmar” reports.

In the Photograph­y category, Agence France-Presse won for its images of women fighting Myanmar’s junta.

In the Documentar­y Video category, BBC Chinese and Deutsche Welle were recognized for their films on anti-extraditio­n bill protesters in Hong Kong and an elite police unit in Bangladesh.

“In an era in which rising authoritar­ianism generates autocratic leaders and mass disinforma­tion, the role of journalist­s in exposing the truth is more critical than ever,” Human Rights Watch executive director Tirana Hassan said.

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