Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'Democra-tators' aim at journalists

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 'Democra-tators' aim at journalists

    The Globe and Mail (Canada)
    April 28, 2007 Saturday

    'Democra-tators' aim at journalists;
    Western war reporters hog the glory, but, as Marina Jimenez writes,
    local watchdogs face the greatest risk

    by Marina Jimenez

    Saleem Samad, a genial refugee from Bangladesh, spends his days
    nabbing shoplifters and shushing disorderly customers as a security
    guard at a Chapters bookstore. But before he arrived in Toronto four
    years ago Mr. Samad, 55, was leading a very different kind of life.

    A prominent journalist, Mr. Samad was forced to spend 55 days in a
    Dhaka prison, simply for having the audacity to criticize his own
    government.

    The annual World Press Freedom Day, to be marked this Thursday,
    honours journalists who brave death or jail in pursuit of the truth.

    Yet, all too often, the headlines focus on international stars such as
    Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter kidnapped and killed by
    extremists in Pakistan. In fact, far more tortured or slain journalists
    are not war correspondents but locals such as Mr. Samad, attacked at
    home or in their newsrooms, often by agents of their own governments.

    Often those governments are, like that of Bangladesh, nominally
    democratic, even members of the Commonwealth. But they are led by
    what Joel Simon of New York's Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
    calls "democra-tators," elected leaders with authoritarian streaks
    such as Vladimir Putin in Russia and Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.

    These leaders have a deep mistrust for the institutions that limit
    their power, such as the judiciary and the press. Three journalists
    were killed in Russia last year, including Anna Politkovskaya,
    a Chechnya expert, last October.

    In the case of Mr. Samad, he was behind bars from late November of
    2002 until mid-January in 2003, and endured torture at the hands
    of military intelligence officers. When he asked his jailors what
    crime he had committed, they said he had smeared Bangladesh's good
    reputation with his exposes on Islamic terrorism, published locally
    and internationally, including in Time.

    "They didn't like my writings on how the Bengali government was
    harbouring terrorists and jihadists," he says. "They wanted to know
    why I was trying to undermine a democratic government. They were
    trying to silence me."

    Mr. Samad was lucky. He was released and in 2004 fled Bangladesh for
    a new life in Canada. Others are not so fortunate.

    According to a report released last month by the Paris-based
    International News Safety Institute (INSI), the number of journalists
    killed on the job has escalated dramatically in recent years. In the
    past decade, more than a thousand media members have been slain, and
    in nine out of 10 cases, the perpetrators have never been prosecuted.

    Reporters Without Borders tabulated the deaths of 81 journalists and
    32 media assistants (drivers, translators, security and fixers) last
    year alone. It is the highest toll since 1994, when 103 died, half of
    them in the Rwandan genocide. An additional 1,400 attacks or threats
    were carried out against journalists - many of them during election
    campaigns in Latin America, Africa and Eastern Europe. Another record.

    That is why the focus for this year's World Press Freedom Day is
    impunity, and the need to bring to justice those who target and
    kill journalists.

    "With the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s and the return to
    democracy in Latin America, we saw an explosion of press freedom,"
    notes Mr. Simon of the CPJ. "But, in this decade, there have been
    some losses."

    Among them is Hrant Dink, editor of Turkey's only Armenian-language
    magazine and a well-known critic of the Turkish government's treatment
    of Armenians. He was shot in the street as he left his office on
    Jan. 19 of this year.

    "In many countries, murder has become the easiest, cheapest and most
    effective way of silencing troublesome reporting and the more the
    killers get away with it, the more the spiral of death is forced
    upwards," INSI director Rodney Pinder said last month.

    Not surprisingly, Iraq is the most dangerous place to report from.

    The United Nations has become so concerned about the deliberate
    targeting of journalists that the Security Council even passed a
    special resolution on Dec. 23, 2006, condemning such attacks and
    reiterating the right of war correspondents to be treated as prisoners
    of war and accorded the rights of civilians under the Third Geneva
    Convention.

    Many journalists, though, are killed not in war zones, but covering
    local politics or crime in countries such as Mexico, Russia, Iran
    and India. Marlene Garcia-Esperat lost her life for her articles
    documenting embezzlement and corruption in the local government in
    Tacurong, the Philippines. She was shot and killed in front of her
    two children on Easter weekend in 2005. Her bodyguards were off-duty.

    Since most of these homicides are never resolved, the sense of
    impunity only encourages more killings, advocates say. There is
    also surprisingly little public sympathy for these cases, as though
    journalists somehow deserve to die for writing about the drug trade,
    or for criticizing an official state religion.

    "There is a sense of complacency when a journalist and their family
    are killed or are under attack. The public finds it easier to support
    police officers or firefighters who die in the line of duty," notes
    Anne Game, executive director of the Toronto-based Canadian Journalists
    for Free Expression (CJFE). "But it's so important to try to protect
    journalists because they're really on the front line.

    Their freedom to speak enables others to."

    Ross Howard, a journalism instructor at Vancouver's Langara College
    and president of Media and Democracy, a non-profit Canadian group,
    has crisscrossed the globe training journalists in the developing
    world - only to see them targeted as they become less partisan and
    more professional.

    "There is a tragic irony in post-conflict states in emerging
    democracies that the better the journalist gets, the more dangerous
    it becomes for him [or] her," he said.

    "In countries such as Iran, Cuba or Pakistan, you cannot criticize
    the supreme leader, question the country's policies or even the
    economic corruption among the power-holders," notes Maryam Aghvami,
    an Iranian journalist who is now living in Toronto, where she heads
    the 70-member Journalists in Exile.

    "If you are brave enough to do so, you are accused of acting against
    the country's national security, spreading lies and spying for
    Western powers."

    Another key difference today is the erosion of the neutral-observer
    status that journalists used to enjoy. Radical or revolutionary groups
    no longer view journalists as conduits of information, but as lucrative
    kidnapping targets.

    Local columnists such as Saleem Samad are seen as "enemies of the
    state," and international correspondents as representatives of their
    own governments.

    While there is no meaningful global data comparing journalists
    killed on the job with, for example, firefighters, Julie Payne,
    CJFE's manager, says the consequences are more profound. The killing
    of a journalist undermines one of the primary means of holding people
    accountable - and serves to silence others.

    That is why advocacy organizations have begun funding legal cases
    overseas. CJFE, the CPJ and a number of other groups helped fund the
    case against Ms. Marlene Garcia-Esperat's killers. Three hit men were
    finally convicted and received life sentences in October, 2006, in Cebu
    - though the true power-holding authors of her death remain at large.

    CJFE also manages the International Freedom of Expression Exchange
    (IFEX), which issues daily alerts of threats and violations to
    journalists all over the world.

    As for Mr. Samad, he, his wife and adult son were all granted asylum
    here. Today, in addition to working security at the local bookstore,
    he edits Durdesh.net, a news portal for the South Asian diaspora.

    He also looks forward to a term this fall as a visiting scholar at
    the University of California at Berkeley's School of Journalism.

    Mr. Samad remains thankful to have escaped with his life. After
    he was released from prison, his house was put under surveillance,
    his phone lines tapped and his wife continually harassed.

    "I kept a small bag ready, sure they would come back and arrest
    me," he recalls. "I was mentally prepared to pay with my life for
    my profession."

    Marina Jimenez is a senior feature writer with The Globe and Mail.

    *****

    Reporters' danger zones

    According to a Committee to Protect Journalists study (which
    uses conservative methodology, defining journalists narrowly),
    580 journalists were killed from January, 1992, to August, 2006,
    from dozens of countries, including:

    Iraq: 79

    Algeria: 60

    Russia: 42

    Colombia: 37

    India: 22

    Bosnia: 19

    Turkey: 18

    In three-quarters of these cases, the journalists were murdered and,
    in one-quarter of those cases, are suspected to have died at the hands
    of government or military officials. About 85 per cent of journalists'
    killers faced neither investigation nor prosecution for their crimes.

    Iraq

    Since fighting began in 2003, 139 journalists have been killed - more
    than twice the number (63) who died on the job during the Vietnam War
    (1955-1975). But most of those killed in Iraq are locals, hired to
    work with their visiting international counterparts, but often lacking
    their connections, security detail and clout.

    Afghanistan

    The Taliban kidnapped an Italian journalist on March 5, along with
    his Afghan driver and translator. The Italian was released two weeks
    later, after a controversial swap for Taliban prisoners negotiated
    by the Italian government. The Afghan driver and interpreter were
    beheaded. Marina Jimenez

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X