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After Deadly '06, Journalists Need Protection

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  • After Deadly '06, Journalists Need Protection

    AFTER DEADLY '06, JOURNALISTS NEED PROTECTION
    By Adam Himmelberger, The Daily Campus; SOURCE: Univ. of Connecticut STORRS, Conn.

    The Daily Campus via U-Wire
    University Wire
    January 25, 2007 Thursday

    The recent assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink is
    another tragic case of violence against the media and the silencing
    of journalists who produce controversial work unpopular with certain
    groups or governments. Dink's murder is a somber reminder that the
    liberal degree of free speech often taken for granted in America is
    not universal. It further highlights the dangers journalists face
    around the world, from reporting in hazardous environments to extreme
    punitive measures for attempting to uncover the truth.

    2006 was the deadliest year for journalists and media workers. The
    International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) reported "at least 155
    murders, assassinations and unexplained deaths." Some were accidental
    at the hands of U.S. soldiers, others were politically motivated hits
    and still others were committed by gangsters or warring factions,
    according to the IFJ report.

    The majority of news media deaths have taken place in Iraq, which has
    become the deadliest war for journalists and the most dangerous place
    to work over the course of American involvement in the region. But
    even outside of classifiable conflict zones, there still lies danger
    for those seeking to report, convey, uncover or express an idea.

    The Turkish-Armenian editor was often the target of prosecution and
    threats due to his "iconoclastic journalism, particularly on the
    mass killings of Armenians in the early 20th century," according to
    the Committee to Protect Journalists' (CPJ) Web site. The Turkish
    government does not acknowledge these World War I killings as
    genocide, which continues to cause great tension between Turks and
    Armenians. Dink's friend Andrew Finkel said Dink "was in favor of
    Turkish and Armenian neighbors being able to look each other in their
    face and recognize their past histories," according to CNN.

    Dink's murder is reminiscent of numerous other journalists' deaths,
    including the high profile murder of Russian journalist, Anna
    Politkovskaya, in October 2006. Many strongly believe she was murdered
    because of her outspoken criticism of the Kremlin and its policies
    toward Chechnya. Tuesday, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
    reported Russian officials announced Chechen police might have been
    behind Politkovskaya's murder because she was going to publish an
    article about the polices' alleged involvement in torture. A caveat
    at the end of the story reminded this is only one of several theories
    behind the murder. Free thinkers and journalists have encountered
    hardships in both Russia and Turkey. Article 301 of Turkish law
    makes it a crime to "insult Turkishness," a charge many writers in
    Turkey have been accused of, including Dink. Intellectuals all over
    the world have called for it to be repealed. In Russia, the Kremlin
    has drawn harsh criticism from the U.S. and other countries for its
    tight control and censorship of the media.

    The suppression of free speech, as well as journalistic pursuits,
    is not unique to these two countries by any stretch of the imagination.

    The Philippines has some of the strictest libel laws in the world,
    through which politicians often invoke in order to squash bad press and
    punish writers. Mexico has surpassed Columbia has the deadliest country
    in the Americas for journalists, a sign of the illegal drug industry
    and other criminal activities shifting, or more accurately, expanding
    closer to the markets. Even the United States, the quintessential
    example of Constitutionally-protected freedom of speech and the press,
    is far from perfect.

    Needless to say, despite the inherent dangers of reporting or speaking
    one's mind in certain countries, more needs to be done to protect
    these courageous individuals whose work is vital to the citizens of
    the world. Non-profit, international non-government organizations
    such as the CPJ and the IJF, lobby governments to ensure the safety
    of journalists, raise money for victim's families and publicize and
    condemn the deaths or censorship of news media workers around the
    globe. The United Nations was finally persuaded on Dec. 23, 2006
    to issue resolution 1738, condemning attacks against journalists
    in conflict situations. The resolution demanded all parties and
    states in armed conflict treat journalists as civilians, comply with
    international law in protecting journalists and prosecute those who
    violate this, according to the U.N.'s Web site.

    However, as is the case with international law, there are limitations
    to what NGOs and resolutions can accomplish. Sadly, so long as there
    are those working to uncover the truth, check the privileged or expose
    the ruthless, there will be the privileged, powerful and ruthless
    working to kill the story -- even if it means killing the writer. And
    so long as there is armed conflict, there will be civilian killings,
    no matter what international law may say. A more modern way of looking
    at the increasing violence against the media across the globe is to
    realize many simply do not like what the general media have come to
    represent. There is a stigma attached to the general news coverage
    of bias, unfairness and propaganda. If groups in some regions of
    the world do not want to be written about, or take issue with their
    coverage, they may resort to eliminating the source of their concern --
    the writer.

    In Dink's case, he used his columns appearing in his newspaper to
    write about a tense history between two ethnic groups with the hope
    that one day they could peacefully come to terms with the past and
    harmoniously exist together as neighbors. For this, he was shot by
    someone who disagreed. Even in death however, the work of journalists
    and other free-thinkers endures. Their missions must be taken up by
    others. If this fails to happen, the stories will die.
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