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US President Donald Trump and former FBI Director James Comey don’t agree on much anymore. One of the more alarming sentiments they did share near the end of Comey’s chaotic tenure last year was an exchange in which Trump suggested that journalists might talk about their sources “if they spent a couple days in jail,” according to a Comey memo released as part of his book tour. Comey said he laughed at the suggestion.
Trump’s antipathy toward the media is well-known, but to see the depth of his hatred for journalists come out in a private exchange like this with a federal law official threatens more sinister days to come.
3 May is World Press Freedom Day, and this year it’s more important than ever. Threats, intimidation, even killings of journalists for their work is on the rise from South America to Europe to Asia. Elections are coming this year in some of the more challenging countries, including Myanmar, Indonesia, and Mexico. One Mexican journalist, Emilio Gutierrez Soto, is already sitting in jail – in the United States. He faces deportation by Trump a decade after fleeing from Mexico in fear for his life after being named to a hit list of journalists.
As president of the World Editor’s Forum, a group of international journalists tied to news and publishing organisation WAN-IFRA, I watch colleagues around the world bravely fight oppression and privacy violations in their countries. Reporting to overturn state capture in South Africa; deep state censorship in Pakistan, where news organisations are forced to remove stories or stop reporting by unknown forces tied to the security apparatus; investigations of digital media in India, where editors say they are routinely intimidated by the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, despite constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech.
My WhatsApp editor’s group list buzzes daily with each new challenge.
We work together to support each other and lobby governments as best we can, but without public support it is always a difficult fight.
That support does exist, when the public gets riled up enough. We saw it two months ago in Slovakia, after journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancé were shot dead in their home, apparently by local mafia. Public protests swelled in the days following the murders, to the point where several government officials were forced to resign for alleged ties to the mafia. We saw it after the murder of Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia in October, who was blown up in her car near her home. European officials have piled pressure on Maltese authorities to solve the murder in recent weeks.
Back in the US, the more Trump agitates, the more his supporters turn against the press. Colleagues covering the president report death threats and online trolling daily, including horrible verbal harassment against woman reporters.
The US fell two places this year in the 2018 World Press Freedom Index, put together by Reporters Without Borders. It placed at number 45 among 180 countries in terms of press freedom, above Italy and behind Romania. Think about that. Romania. Trump is to blame here.
Verbal violence leads to actual violence. We can see it playing out right in front of us. Jailings in Turkey and harassment in India are happening real-time.
(This article was originally published on Wan-Infra)
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