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It’s been seven months since Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and dissident, was brutally murdered inside the country’s consulate in Istanbul. His dismembered body has still not been found. The Saudi Royal Family remains the chief suspect.
BlackRock founder, Larry Fink, recently told The New York Times that he wants to engage the Saudis rather than shun them for whatever internal troubles led to the killing of a respected member of the press and columnist for The Washington Post. Other companies, including Google, Softbank, and HSBC, are also planning business ventures with the Saudis, The Times reported.
Too busy to read? Listen to this instead.
On World Press Freedom Day, as more than 250 journalists around the world languish in jails in places such as Turkey, China, and Egypt, and hundreds of others risk their lives daily to bring truth to their readers, it’s important to stand up and call this what it is: naked and unabashed greed at the expense of justice.
Signing up for conferences, joint ventures and other deals is not engaging a foreign government to make a difference. These companies, so practiced at wringing the last dollar at the bargaining table, aren’t there to negotiate for the truth tellers. It’s all about the money, and the Saudis know it. The world is a tough place, they say.
In Myanmar, two Reuters journalists have sat in filthy jail cells for more than 16 months, and face seven-year sentences for their reportage of the massacre of Rohingya Muslims. In the Philippines, crusading journalist Maria Ressa faces jail and bankruptcy for her Rappler news group’s reportage of atrocities by the Duterte government. In Pakistan, Cyril Almeida faces treason charges for reporting on civil-military tensions. In Mexico, four journalists have been killed already this year, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). And in Northern Ireland, 29-year-old Lyra McKee became the first journalist in 18 years to be killed when she was shot in the head during a protest.
These days, terrorists think nothing of video streaming beheadings and coordinating suicide bombings in packed churches on Easter Sunday. Or bringing down jetliners. Against this ever-increasing spiral of violence, any appeasement or apathy by those who can and should help, is a green light to terror and tyranny. Strongmen leaders emboldened by President Trump’s lack of action, grow more brazen by the day.
The world’s media is right to highlight these statistics. The world has become less and less of a place for press freedom in the last decade, as terror and authoritarianism have grown. Some groups, like CPJ or Reporters Without Borders, or the organisation I belong to, the World Editors Forum, try to make a difference. But it is an uphill slog.
Still, we’ve had some victories. A campaign in Montenegro to protest government attacks on journalists, drew the attention of the US ambassador, and for a while helped stifle the violence earlier this year. Safety training in places like Indonesia and Uganda helps journalists learn how to cover natural disasters and large public protests, with the latest techniques to avoid violence or accidents.
The rise of interest in the media from a new crop of tech billionaires such as Jeff Bezos and Marc Benioff has funneled money into media at a time when declining business models are hurting great journalism even more than coordinated violence.
Working together, across news organisations and borders, is the only way forward. Raising funds for support and training. Highlighting injustices when possible. And educating the public about how and why journalists do what they do. These are our goals this World Press Freedom Day.
If we can work together to stand up for one another, and garner the support of the leaders who have the power to wield influence, even small gains will be worth the risk.
(Dave Callaway is President of the World Editors Forum, the leading network for print and digital editors of newspapers and news organisations around the world. It is built on a commitment to defend press freedom and promote editorial excellence. The World Editors Forum is an established network with a 20-year history of connecting editors on issues that matter, and is part of the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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Published: 02 May 2019,05:08 PM IST