Over 700 journalists killed in 10 yrs, only one convicted

Over 700 journalists killed in 10 yrs, only one convicted

FPJ BureauUpdated: Friday, May 31, 2019, 09:09 PM IST
article-image

London : More than 700 journalists have been killed over the past decade for bringing news and information to the public but the sad part is that only one in just 10 cases of the 700 killings has led to any conviction of those responsible, experts have said, reports IANS.

According to professor Jackie Harrison, joint head of the University of Sheffield’s department of journalism studies, the deliberate targeting of reporters is relatively new and raises questions about press safety and the impunity of those who attack them.

“The way in which journalism is seen in different parts of the world has changed,” said Harrison.

“Journalists used to be more protected, but what’s happening now is that they are deliberately being targeted — and it’s about information control,” he lamented in a university statement. Journalists themselves are getting killed because people are trying to silence them.

“You can just be in the wrong place at the wrong time, but what is relatively new is this singling out of journalists.

These are attacks on freedom of expression and the public right to know,” he informed.

It is a matter of increasing concern that journalists are being jailed and attacked around the world for exercising the right to freedom of expression.

Those who have died include Marie Colvin and James Foley(in pic) in Syria and staff at Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris.

The United Nations (UN) has developed an “Action Plan on the Safety of Journalists and the Issue of Impunity”.

However, professor Harrison points out there is concern that plans like these can only succeed if news organisations and the public are aware of them and engage with matters of safety. In order to investigate these issues, professor Harrison is carrying out interviews with editors and senior journalists working at news organisations in six countries.

The target countries in the project are Pakistan, Mexico, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Turkey, India and Bulgaria.

“The reason they have been selected is their low position on the Press Freedom Index 2014, which ranks the performance of 180 countries according to their treatment of journalists and the media in general,” he noted.

Of the six countries, Pakistan is lowest ranked at 158th. Currently ranked 152nd, Mexico is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists with 76 killed between 2000 and 2013, and 16 disappeared since 2003.

RECENT STORIES

UK Passes Controversial Law To Send Asylum Seekers To Rwanda

UK Passes Controversial Law To Send Asylum Seekers To Rwanda

Dubai Airport Operations Back To Normal After Experiencing Heaviest Rainfall In Past 75 Years

Dubai Airport Operations Back To Normal After Experiencing Heaviest Rainfall In Past 75 Years

India, Turkmenistan Among Asian Countries Hit By Heatwave In 2023, Says UN Report

India, Turkmenistan Among Asian Countries Hit By Heatwave In 2023, Says UN Report

Earthquake Alert! Massive 6.1 Magnitude Quake Jolts Taiwan A Day After 5 Tremors Hit Hualien County;...

Earthquake Alert! Massive 6.1 Magnitude Quake Jolts Taiwan A Day After 5 Tremors Hit Hualien County;...

Artist Robert Zhao Renhui’s Seeing Forest Represents Singapore At 60th Venice Biennale

Artist Robert Zhao Renhui’s Seeing Forest Represents Singapore At 60th Venice Biennale