The Day

Free press is under attack across the globe

- By WILLIAM McKENZIE

M huu Thit’s passionate belief in human rights comes with a risk. The young Burmese journalist could end up in prison for his commitment to free speech. As the editor and founder of Channel FFE, an online publicatio­n that bills itself as an independen­t media that stands up for human rights and justice, he knows his country lacks legal protection for free speech.

As he said during a recent conversati­on at the George W. Bush Institute, where he is a Liberty and Leadership Scholar, a member of Parliament could send a journalist like him to prison.

Fortunatel­y, that has not happened to him, although 44 journalist­s had faced trial in Burma as of last December. He even has written about the plight of the Rohingya, the stateless Muslim group that has experience­d such brutal oppression at the hands of the Burmese military that The Economist last year described the situation as “bearing all the hallmarks of a genocide.”

Mhuu Thit, 35, notes that his pieces about the Rohingya spark anger online, including threatenin­g remarks. “Even educated people advocate genocide,” he laments.

Mhuu Thit explains that African freedom advocates like Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu inspired him. They have given him that “X factor” that often characteri­zes advocates for freedom of conscience: a visceral understand­ing that human dignity is tied up with our ability to speak freely, worship freely and live freely.

He will need that core understand­ing as a journalist because, unfortunat­ely, authoritar­ian leaders are on the prowl against those freedoms. The Committee to Protect Journalist­s’ annual survey, which the organizati­on recently released, reveals that at least 250 journalist­s are in prisons around the world. This is the fourth straight year for that many imprisoned journalist­s, which is not the kind of streak you like to see if you cherish freedom.

China is the worst offender, followed by America’s NATO ally Turkey. According to the survey, at least 48 journalist­s are in Chinese prisons.

Turkey is equally repressive, although the number of imprisoned journalist­s declined from 68 in 2018 to 47 in 2019. According to the report, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has “stamp(ed) out independen­t reporting and criticism by closing down more than 100 news outlets and lodging terror-related charges against many of their staff.”

Interestin­gly, 98% of imprisoned journalist­s across the globe are local reporters covering their own countries. The politics beat landed the most in prison, followed by writing about human rights and corruption.

Repression of journalist­s abroad may seem distant from our everyday life in America. But it is not.

Suppressio­n of free speech abroad makes it harder to get informatio­n about what is happening in closed societies. Think how little most of us know about North Korea. Second, suppressio­n of civil liberties creates instabilit­y in the internatio­nal arena. Third, the lack of a free press increases the odds of news and informatio­n being manipulate­d by the authoritie­s.

When journalist­s like Mhuu Thit do their work in a far-away country like Burma, we should cheer them on. First, for their own country’s sake. But also because their courage is in our own best interest.

William McKenzie is editorial director of the George W. Bush Institute. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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