AIB PMA Media Freedom Symposium | 19 April 2021

AIB PMA Media Freedom Symposium | 19 April 2021

AIB PMA Media Freedom Symposium | 19 April 2021

The rapid decline in media freedom around the world is perilous for citizens everywhere. Despite the increased need for accurate, quality news and information during the COVID-19 pandemic, journalists and news organisations worldwide face an alarming level of harassment, threats and direct attacks for simply doing their jobs.  

From media capture in Hungary and Poland to political interference in Hong Kong, these challenges are more globally affecting than at any time in recent history. Yet despite this escalating situation, there is often a lack of in-depth or effective coverage by news and media organisations even though they are among the primary victims.

While governments are regularly the perpetrators of increased restrictions on media freedom, there are fears that a lack of significant coverage is not only detrimental in holding power to account, but also impacts public understanding regarding the impact of media freedom issues on society.

The reasons for a lack of coverage are diverse and often a consequence of political pressure. Yet since 2019, there have been a number of events that have been significant in the way they have brought together news media and governments in an attempt to foster greater dialogue and understanding. However, talking and reviewing geopolitics and themes is insufficient. Concerted action is required by the two groups to better raise public awareness and inspire positive change.

Reviewing this situation and the increasing number of attacks on media organisations and media workers, the Association for International Broadcasting (AIB) and the Public Media Alliance (PMA) – supported by Al Jazeera Media Network (AJMN) – are partnering to produce two events with clear practical outcomes that will help influence key players within the media freedom field to not only address the appalling level of abuses, but also identify ways to improve coverage of media freedom abuses worldwide.

Outcomes

The participants of this first Symposium (19 April) will be news organisations and journalists These participants have a strong voice and can influence governments and society by working more closely together.

In order to have an effect and not be just another well intentioned “discussion only” event, we believe that the Symposium should explore ways to effect real change in terms of shining a media spotlight on the issues worldwide.  Additional tangible outcomes could include a joint declaration by attendees or a coordinated campaign across multiple media outlets.

A second symposium will be held later in 2021 involving media groups and government representatives from around the world.

Read the Symposium brochure here.

To request participation in the April 2021 Symposium, use this form.

TRT WORLD FORUM Digital Debates on ‘Arab Spring 2.0’

TRT WORLD FORUM Digital Debates on ‘Arab Spring 2.0’

TRT WORLD FORUM Digital Debates on ‘Arab Spring 2.0’

Today, as part of its monthly series ‘A Decade into the Arab Spring: Past Reflections and Future Projections’, TRT World’s  #DigitalDebates is hosting Youcef Bouandel, @AmelBoubekeur, and @LakGhettas to discuss ‘Arab Spring 2.0: Past Lessons Unheeded in #Algeria’.

 

Wednesday, 10 March 2021

8:00pm (5:00 GMT)

 

Twitter, Facebook, YouTube: @trtworldforum

UK launches plan to ensure safety of journalists

UK launches plan to ensure safety of journalists

UK launches plan to ensure safety of journalists

The British government has published the UK’s first national action plan to protect journalists from abuse and harassment.

  • Plan sets out how journalists will be protected from threats of violence and intimidation
  • Includes new measures to research the problem and training for police forces and journalists
  • Broadcasters, publishers, social media companies, law enforcement, industry bodies, unions and the government all make pledges

It follows reports to the government from journalists who have suffered abuse and attacks while going about their work, including being punched, threatened with knives, forcibly detained and subjected to rape and death threats.

A survey of members of the National Union of Journalists in November also found more than half of respondents had experienced online abuse while nearly a quarter had been physically assaulted or attacked.

The plan will increase awareness of the safety challenges faced by journalists operating in the UK and introduce measures to tackle them in a joint effort by law enforcement, broadcasters, publishers, industry bodies, unions and the government.

Measures include new training for police officers as well as aspiring and existing journalists, and commitments from social media platforms and prosecution services to take tough action against abusers – including responding promptly to complaints of threats to journalists’ safety.

The plan has been endorsed by the National Committee for the Safety of Journalists, membership of which comprises industry stakeholders including the National Union of Journalists and Society of Editors.

It will be reviewed as necessary on an ongoing basis and supports the wider work the government is doing to uphold freedom of speech, in particular protecting journalistic content from censorship and takedown online. The Government is also publishing a broader update today on its ongoing work to tackle intimidation in public life.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said:

“Freedom of speech and a free press are at the very core of our democracy, and journalists must be able to go about their work without being threatened.

“The cowardly attacks and abuse directed at reporters for simply doing their job cannot continue.

“This action plan is just the start of our work to protect those keeping the public informed, and defend those holding the government to account.”

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said:

“Attacks on journalists are not only horrendous for those individuals but an assault on our democracy. Today’s action plan will make sure journalists can go about their vital work without fear.

“But just as we protect the physical safety of journalists we must protect their freedom to write and report too. Tackling worrying trends on online censorship of journalistic content and controversial views, we will ensure our forthcoming online safety laws build in robust protections for journalism.”

Minister for Media and Data and Chair of the National Committee for the Safety of Journalists, John Whittingdale (pictured above), said:

“We will not tolerate a world where journalists are silenced through fear or censorship and want the UK to set an international example for the respect, treatment and protection of those working in the field. This plan is the first step towards achieving those aims.”

The plan sets out a series of commitments from relevant organisations focused on protecting the safety of journalists based in the UK.

The government

The Department for Digital, Media, Culture and Sport (DCMS) and the Home Office will shortly issue a call for evidence to build a better understanding of the volume and type of threats and abuse against journalists. It will build on existing reports from journalists – for example, of hospital admissions following assaults and online death threats – to develop a targeted approach to tackling the issue.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) will use its global network, including its co-chairship of the Media Freedom Coalition, to share insights and strategies on the protection of journalists, with the aim of strengthening approaches in other countries.

Online platforms

With online abuse being one of the biggest challenges facing journalists today, particularly for BAME and female journalists, Facebook and Twitter have committed to respond promptly to complaints of threats to journalists’ safety.

The government is already tackling online abuse through the forthcoming Online Safety Bill. All social media users, including journalists, will be better able to report abuse and be supported by the platforms if they do so.

Online platforms will be required to protect users and enforce their terms and conditions or face sanctions – including fines of up to 10 per cent of their annual turnover or having their services blocked. The Bill will also enshrine in law protections for journalistic content and free debate online.

Police

The National Council for the Training of Journalists (NCTJ) will work with the police which will provide training for journalists reporting on police operations, initially through a workshop at the University of Portsmouth.

The police will engage with the National Union of Journalists (NUJ), the Society of Editors and others to update their training offer for police around journalists covering demonstrations and investigating crime against journalists.

Every police force is to be given access to a designated journalist safety liaison officer while the National Police Chiefs’ Council has appointed a lead officer – Chief Constable Gavin Stephens – to take responsibility for crime against journalists at national level.

Media organisations

Organisations such as the Media Lawyers Association will produce further guidance to help journalists recognise and understand when abuse breaks the law and what they can do about it. The NCTJ will provide safety training for student journalists while the NUJ and Society of Editors will collate and host a free online support pack for journalists.

Publishers and broadcasters have committed to providing new training for staff and freelancers on managing threats. They will review and collaborate on safety policies and ensure they are well publicised, and establish designated safety officers within their organisations.

Prosecution services

Freedom of expression and the right to receive and impart information are recognised and protected by law. Criminal offences committed against journalists exercising those rights jeopardise both the right to free speech and public service, and prosecutors rightly take such offences extremely seriously.

In the plan, the separate UK prosecution services for England and Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland reaffirm their commitment to taking a robust approach to crimes against journalists and bringing those responsible to justice.

Ian Murray, executive director of the Society of Editors said:

“The Action Plan recognises the urgency of protecting journalists carrying out their vital role in protecting democracy.

“Due to their role in holding the powerful and those in authority to task journalists attract strong reactions. But this should not manifest itself in ways that threaten journalists and their families. This action plan makes that clear.”

NUJ general secretary Michelle Stanistreet said:

“Attacks on journalists are designed to silence and intimidate those who work to uphold the public’s right to know. NUJ members have shared horrific experiences of being attacked, abused and threatened – on and offline – simply for doing their job.

“It’s clear that reported incidents are the tip of the iceberg and that harassment and abuse has become normalised. This action plan, with its range of practical measures and protections, is an important step towards changing that and ensuring journalists can get on with their vital work free from harassment or intimidation.”

News Media Association chief executive David Newell said:

“The coronavirus crisis has thrown a spotlight on the importance of trusted news and information yet abuse of journalists, often on social media, has risen markedly over the same period.

“There can be no place in our democratic society for abuse and attacks on journalists, which constitute a threat to free speech, and the national action plan is a welcome development to help address this.”

Chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council’s Communications Advisory Group, Chief Constable Gavin Stephens said:

“Journalists are a vital cog in a functioning society and deserve to be respected for the role they play in providing a public information service and holding authorities to account.

“Any restriction of those values severely impacts public confidence and trust both of which are core principles in policing and what drive the communities we serve to be safe and feel safe.

“I’m committed to raising awareness within policing of the long term damaging impact that targeting journalists can have and will be doing so through my new role. The impact of these crimes is not just on individuals and their welfare but also on press freedom itself, which has to be upheld and protected.”

France licences Chinese international channel CGTN

France licences Chinese international channel CGTN

France licences Chinese international channel CGTN

/Flickr:Fred RomeroFrench media regulator, the Conseil Supérieure de l’Audiovisuel [CSA], has granted a licence to international channel CGTN.

In February 2021, UK regulator Ofcom stripped the Chinese international channel of its UK broadcasting licence after an investigation that revealed that the channel is under the control of the Chinese government. Direct government control of a broadcaster is not permitted under UK law. As a result of the licence revocation, CGTN went off the air in the UK and a number of other countries in Europe.

CGTN applied to the CSA under the Europe-wide legislation that allows a channel that is uplinked from a European state to apply for a licence in that territory. CGTN is uplinked to the Eutelsat fleet. Eutelsat is domiciled in France.

In a statement the CSA said that CGTN will be subject to a French law enacted in 1986 that says that broadcasters must prevent incitement to hatred and violence. In addition they must guarantee respect for human dignity, as well as remaining impartial. The regulator has said that it will monitor CGTN closely to ensure that the channel complies with these legal requirements.

The announcement came on the day that the President Director-General of France Médias Monde – the holding company of France’s international TV and radio services – was interviewed on France Inter. During the interview, Marie-Christine Saragosse talked about the increasing activity of China in international broadcasting and the need for France to have its voice clearly heard.

Image: Tour Mirabeau in Paris where the CSA is based/Flickr: Fred Romero

NHK WORLD TV programme highlights for March

NHK WORLD TV programme highlights for March

NHK WORLD TV programme highlights for March

Ken Watanabe: The decade since the Great East Japan Earthquake

March 6th

1:10 / 7:10 / 13:10 / 19:10

 

Actor Ken Watanabe started going to meet victims of the Great East Japan Earthquake two months after its occurrence in 2011. Since then, he has listened to the stories of more than 20,000 people. Watanabe has used his stature to bring international attention to the disaster. He also has drawn on personal funds to open a café in Kesennuma. The program returns to four communities seriously affected by the quake—Katsurao (Fukushima), Kesennuma (Miyagi), Rikuzentakata (Iwate), and Kamaishi (Iwate)—and revisits some of Watanabe’s encounters over the past decade.

Kiyo in Kyoto: from the Maiko House

March 24th

23:30 / 5:30 / 12:30 / 17:30

Teenage Kiyo and her childhood friend Sumire have come to Kyoto far away from their hometown, dreaming to become maiko (professional female entertainers especially skilled in traditional performing arts such as dance and music).However, after an unexpected turn of events, Kiyo starts working as a live-in cook at a place called “Maiko House”, where maiko live together like a family. Sumire, on the other hand, strives toward her promising future as “the one-in-a-century maiko”. Their story unfolds in Kyoto’s traditional entertainment district called Kagai.You will enjoy its gorgeous atmosphere and behind-the-scenes anecdotes as wonderful meals prepared by Kiyo and her kitchen episodes will warm your heart. Stay tuned for this touching story of two childhood friends encouraging each other to grow up together!

The Tale of Granny Mochi: Kuwata Misao

March 14th

1:10 / 7:10 / 13:10 / 19:10

The Tsugaru peninsula lies on the northern part of Japan’s main island, and is home to some of the country’s most untamed landscapes. For more than 30 years, 93-year-old Kuwata Misao has made over 50,000 Sasa-mochi rice cakes every year here, all on her own. She goes into the wilderness to find bamboo leaves, and grows her own azuki beans to ensure the perfect ingredients for her delicious mochi. What is the meaning of work? Of life? Of happiness? Granny Mochi’s quiet, delightful tale warms the heart.

[Source: NHK WORLD TV]

USAGM condemneds Russian court’s decision to fine RFE/RL

USAGM condemneds Russian court’s decision to fine RFE/RL

USAGM condemneds Russian court’s decision to fine RFE/RL

The U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) today condemned a Russian court’s decision to levy steep fines against Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL).

“USAGM is very disappointed with the court’s decision, which can only be interpreted as an assault on media freedom and the free flow of information to Russia’s citizens. I have every confidence in RFE/RL as they continue to provide audiences in Russia with access to truthful, impactful reporting,” said USAGM Acting Chief Executive Officer Kelu Chao.

Russia’s revised “foreign agent” law requires designated news organizations in Russia that receive foreign funding to prominently label all content, including social media, as foreign agent-produced. Most of the organizations so designated by the Russian Ministry of Justice are USAGM public service media outlets, predominantly associated with RFE/RL. The law, originally passed in 2012 and amended in 2020 to include individual journalists, also imposes regular financial reporting requirements on these outlets. Given that USAGM’s legislatively mandated firewall prohibits its networks from accepting editorial direction from the U.S. government, RFE/RL has refused to label its content in such a wholly inaccurate manner.

In filing more than 250 violations of “foreign agent” regulations, the Kremlin has specifically targeted nine of RFE/RL’s reporting projects: Radio Liberty, its main service for Russia; the Current Time TV and digital network serving a global Russian-speaking audience; the regional reporting projects North.Realities, Siberia.Realities, Caucasus.Realities, Idel.Realities, and Crimea.Realities; the Tatar-Bashkir Service; and the fact-checking website Factograph.info. Additionally, in late December, the Kremlin named three RFE/RL freelance reporters as individual “foreign agent” journalists.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said Russia should repeal the foreign agent law and “ensure that the country’s regulator is not used to censure journalists and harass and threaten media organizations.” Amnesty International said Russia’s foreign agent law further erodes freedom of expression and association” in that country.

[Source: USAGM press release; Image: P Photo/Pavel Golovkin/Associated Press/Alamy Stock Photo]