Statements
On this World Press Freedom Day 2006, press freedom is under attack in all
the world's major regions, including in numerous traditionally democratic
countries.
During the past year, more journalists and news media support staffers have
been killed than ever before. There has been little serious effort to act
against impunity for such killings or, indeed, against the many other pressures
short of murder placed on a free press in print, broadcast and cyberspace. It is
evident that when journalists are deliberately targeted or harassed, it is
because the perpetrators have something to hide from public scrutiny.
Many measures that would restrict free speech and press freedom have been
enacted or placed under official consideration. Various justifications have been
invoked - the struggle against terrorism, national security, blasphemy,
protection of children from exploitation and pornography, the invasive nature of
new communication technologies, the need to impose journalistic
“responsibility,” etc.
In most cases these are merely pretexts to limit the right of citizens to
know what authorities are doing or to engage in free discussion of fundamental
ideas. New limitations by established democracies are brandished by
authoritarian governments to validate their own repression of independent
reporting and free comment.
Where such restrictive measures are proposed but withdrawn or circumscribed
under public pressure, they nevertheless incite self-censorship.
The time is long past for the international community to rededicate itself to
implementing the standing promise since 1948 of Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights:
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right
includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and
impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
States and citizens must recognize that no meaningful exercise of liberties
is possible unless their application in practice can be described, defended and
promoted by a free press in all communication technologies.
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Richard N. Winfield, Chairman
Ronald Koven, European Representative
E. Markham Bench, Executive Director
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