1,700 journalists killed between 02006 and 2024: UNESCO
UNB
Publish: 02 Nov 2024, 07:44 PM
Dhaka,
Nov 2 (UNB)-Over 1,700 journalists worldwide were killed between 2006 and 2024,
with about 85 percent of these cases never reaching the courts, according to a
report by UNESCO.
This grim statistic
underscores the risks journalists face, particularly highlighted each year on
November 2, the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against
Journalists.
This year, the day also
marks the release of UNESCO's biannual Director-General's Report on the Safety
of Journalists, showing a 38 percent rise in journalist killings since the
previous report.
In his 2024 message for
the Day, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pointed out that Gaza has seen
the highest number of killings of journalists and media workers in any war in
decades, and called on governments to take urgent steps to protect journalists,
investigate crimes against them, and prosecute perpetrators.
The war in Gaza
inevitably dominated the 2024 UN International Media Seminar on Peace in the
Middle East on Friday, an event that has taken place annually for the past
three decades, with the aim of enhancing dialogue and understanding between
media practitioners, and fostering their contributions in support of a peaceful
settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In a statement to the
Seminar, read out by UN head of global communications, Melissa Fleming, Mr.
Guterres noted that journalists in Gaza have been killed "at a level
unseen in any conflict in modern times," adding that the ongoing ban
preventing international journalists from Gaza "suffocates the truth even
further."
Below is an excerpt of
the comments made by Cheikh Niang, Chairman of the UN Committee on the
Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, and the Permanent Representative
of Senegal to the United Nations; Guilherme Canela, Chief of Section, Freedom
of Expression and Safety of Journalists, UNESCO; and Mohammad Ali Alnsour,
Chief of the Middle East and North Africa Section, the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
One year has passed
since the events of October 7th, 2023, when Palestinian militants attacked
Israel, followed by a devastating Israel. Israeli response in Gaza.
Since then, access to
information has been severely curtailed. Journalists have been killed,
newsrooms destroyed, foreign press blocked and communications cut. Israeli
forces, as the occupying power, have systematically dismantled Palestinian
media infrastructure. Silencing voices through restrictions, threats, targeted
killings and censorship.
In the past 380 days,
over 130 Palestinian journalists have been killed by Israeli forces in Gaza.
These were voices reporting on possible war crimes, silenced before their
stories could be fully told.
Journalists in Gaza
continue to report on the humanitarian crisis, often at great personal risk,
providing the world with an accurate picture of the unfolding tragedy. We
honour their courage and recognize that their loss silences their stories and
severely limits the public's access to the truth.
UNESCO
Director-General's Report on the Safety of Journalists and the Issue of
Impunity has, for many years, been showing a decrease in the number of
journalists killed in conflicts compared with the journalists killed in other
situations.
This is not true for
this report. Since the report we issued in 2017, it was completely changed
because of the situation in Gaza. Journalists were killed because they were
telling a story, a story that is relevant for each one of us and of each
citizen.
The International Day to
End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists
Every two years, the
awareness raising campaign for the commemoration of the International Day to
End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists coincides with the findings of the
Report outlining the current state of global and regional impunity.
UNESCO is concerned that
impunity damages whole societies by covering up serious human rights abuses,
corruption, and crime. Governments, civil society, the media, and everyone
concerned to uphold the rule of law are being asked to join in the global
efforts to end impunity.
END/UNB/FH/1437 Hrs