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Emdashes: Pressed For Freedom Of The Press

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  • Emdashes: Pressed For Freedom Of The Press

    EMDASHES: PRESSED FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS
    By Emily Greenhouse

    The Wesleyan Argus
    Features - October 9, 2007

    One year ago almost to the day, the Russian journalist Anna
    Politkovskaya was found slain in her apartment building in Moscow,
    shot through the head. For years, Politkovskaya's hard-hitting
    investigative reporting had told stories of the brutality and
    corruption of Russia's 'dirty war' in Chechnya that most of the
    international media had ceased to write about. Through arrests, death
    threats, and a near-poisoning--and in a media increasingly controlled
    by the state and its oligarchs--the unflinching Politkovskaya never
    slowed down.

    Even at the time of her death, the 48-year-old Politkovskaya had been
    reporting on the torture of Chechen civilians by pro-Moscow security
    forces. Four days after her murder on October 7 of last year, the
    independent Novaya Gazeta (Russia's leading opposition newspaper)
    published her unfinished article, alongside pictures of the torture
    victims.

    Despite her international acclaim, there was no attempt made to
    disguise Politkovskaya's murder. She was shot multiple times in
    broad daylight, her body lying in the elevator of her apartment,
    next to the assassin's pistol.

    The Novaya Gazeta now knows the identity of Politkovskaya's assassin,
    yet the man has been neither found nor arrested. Furthermore, Russian
    prosecutors have not identified the person who ordered this contract
    killing.

    Politkovskaya was a shining example of courage in journalism, and her
    unsolved case is singularly devastating. The murder of journalists,
    however, is a story by no means unique to Russia. According to the
    Committee to Protect Journalists, which keeps "detailed data on
    journalists killed on duty as part of its mission of defending press
    freedom," 636 journalists have been killed worldwide since 1992.

    One-hundred fifteen journalists have been killed in Iraq since March
    2003, and as of December 1, 2006, 134 journalists worldwide were
    imprisoned (China, Cuba, Eritrea and Ethiopia being the top jailors).

    A weekly glance through international news reports shows how
    commonplace such abuse is. This past week, a 17-year-old admitted to
    killing a well-known Turkish-Armenian journalist in January. Less than
    two weeks ago, a Japanese journalist named Kenji Nagai was shot to
    death in the crackdown by Myanmar's junta. Nagai, a photojournalist,
    continued to take photographs from the ground, after being shot by a
    Burmese soldier. In mid-August, two Somali journalists were killed in
    Mogadishu, one fatally wounded as he drove back from the funeral of his
    colleague at HornAfrik, who had been shot outside his office. Chauncey
    Bailey, a journalist who had recently been named editor of The Oakland
    Post (considered a prominent African-American publication), was shot
    to death on August 2 on a downtown Oakland street.

    Each year, numbers of journalists across the globe are arrested,
    beaten, harassed, raped, kidnapped, exiled and murdered. But it's not
    only through violence that freedom of the press is restrained--even
    in this country.

    When The New York Times published an article detailing
    U.S. investigations into terror-financing activity last year,
    President Bush called it "disgraceful," and Donald Rumsfeld claimed
    the piece would "cause the loss of American lives." Right-wing pundits
    discussed whether Bill Keller, the Executive Editor of the Times,
    should be jailed, killed by firing squad or electrocuted by gas
    chamber. Two-hundred twenty members of the House, including every
    single Republican but one (Connecticut's own Christopher Shays,
    actually), voted to condemn the paper for violation of the Espionage
    Act of 1917.

    As part of its crusade not to be held accountable for certain
    actions, the Bush administration has made it exceedingly difficult for
    reporters to do their job. During the few press conferences that Bush
    actually holds, he often finds ways to dodge the most hard-hitting
    questions. In skewing public broadcasting, in paying off pundits and
    in deceptively delivering fake news on matters like Iraq (this does
    not mean Jon Stewart), the administration seems contemptuous of the
    Freedom of Information Act and what it stands for. Bush and co. are
    all about gaining maximum access to information for themselves (see:
    the Patriot Act) and denying it to the public.

    U.N. Goodwill Ambassador and arm-candy-de-Brad Angelina Jolie was
    right in "A Mighty Heart," her valiant attempt to raise awareness
    about the kidnap and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel
    Pearl. The assault on journalism does not just concern journalists.

    We can critique The New York Times for its liberal (or conservative)
    slant all we want and mock The New York Post or The Wall Street Journal
    (especially considering the Murdoch-approaching reign), but the moment
    we stop fighting for freedom of the press, we lose an important pillar
    of democratic society.

    For fighting against Russia's 'dirty war,'Anna Politkovskaya met
    her end in the 'dirty war' against journalism. She was punished in
    her quest for openness and accountability; Politkovskaya was killed
    for doing her job. Her murder should be remembered, therefore, as
    nothing more and nothing less than a testament to the power of the
    written word.

    The Committee to Protect Journalists is urging Russian President
    Vladimir Putin to conduct an investigation that is "diligent,
    transparent, and free of political influence." Politkovskaya's tale
    deserves such an investigation, and Russia cannot afford to cast
    aside the case without doing justice. Freedom of the press, after all,
    is one casualty that we cannot afford.
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