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Thursday is World Press Freedom Day -- a time to remember and celebrate the crucial role a free press plays in democracy and development.

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The Price of Press Freedom

By Rory O'Connor, AlterNet. Posted May 1, 2007.


Thursday is World Press Freedom Day -- a time to remember and celebrate the crucial role a free press plays in democracy and development.
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Thursday is World Press Freedom Day, a day when all of us -- citizens, media professionals, governments, non-governmental organizations and what has come to be known as "civil society" -- should remember and celebrate the crucial role a free press plays in democracy and development.

Throughout the world, May 3 also serves as a much-needed annual reminder that our human right to freedom of expression is all too often violated -- and that many journalists face jail or even death to give us each day our daily news.

And yes -- let's never forget that freedom of expression is a fundamental human right, as outlined in article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which says that "everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; that 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."

World Press Freedom Day is meant to remind both citizens and governments that they need to reaffirm this right "as an essential foundation of the information society."

Originally proclaimed by the United Nations' General Assembly in 1993, the occasion has also been marked since 1997 by the awarding of the annual UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize to a deserving person, organization or institution that has made an outstanding contribution to the defense and promotion of press freedom anywhere in the world -- especially when this has been achieved in the face of danger.

Significantly, the Prize is named in honor of Guillermo Cano Isaza, a Colombian journalist who was assassinated in front of the offices of his newspaper, El Espectador, in Bogota, in 1986 for denouncing the activities of powerful drug barons in his country.

Twenty years later, journalists like Cano are still dying simply for doing their job. In fact, last year saw a record number of journalists and media workers killed or thrown in prison around the world, with dozens dead in Iraq alone.

With reporters being killed or held hostage by groups in conflict, with governments jailing, threatening and censoring journalists and cyber dissidents for promoting democracy or political debate, and with drug traffickers, corrupt local politicians and other criminals getting rid of reporters investigating their whereabouts, members of the media are literally risking their lives just to get the story. Every year it seems there are more and more dangers to be overcome. And more and more journalists are paying the ultimate price -- losing their lives -- simply to protect our right to know.


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Filmmaker and journalist Rory O'Connor writes the Media Is A Plural blog.

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An excellent reminder...but more freedoms to think about....
Posted by: Michael Boldin on May 1, 2007 10:59 AM   
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As George Washington once said:

"If the freedom of speech is taken away then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."

The freedom of speech is the beginning of true liberty in society. But, as we go through the Bill of Rights, there's plenty more - and we'll truly have peace and prosperity once the politicians in D.C. decide to start following ALL ten amendments, rather than just the ones they personally like.

The Bill of Rights isn't just some good idea, it's the law.

A good read on this:

Contract with America: Bill of Rights
http://www.populistamerica.com/contract_with_america

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Independent journalists are indispensable
Posted by: Paul Lookman on May 1, 2007 12:33 PM   
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In a world where MPs are tied to party interests rather than control their government, in this world of Orwellian misinformation and make-belief, independent journalists are indispensable. You quite rightly mention such brave journalists like Guillermo Cano, Anna Politkovskaya, Paul Klebnikov and Alan Johnston. I would like to single out Alan in particular, as he is one of the very few Western journalists, or perhaps the only journalist, brave enough to live in, and report from Gaza, under extremely poor living conditions. All other Western journalists choose to report on the Palestine conflict at arm’s length from the luxury of their hotel rooms in Israel. I also have little respect for the many Western journalists who accepted to be embedded with (and treated as VIPs by) the US army and hardly if ever went their own way to really dig deep in true nature of the Iraqi problem. We heard preciously little about the new oil law, enabling foreign oil companies to book Iraqi oil on their balance sheets. This is the main reason for Bush and Blair to go to war! Most of what we, newspaper readers and TV viewers, were allowed to see were the spectacular fireworks presented by the US army, and not the other side. So far so good for independent journalism? Perhaps this aspect should also be put on the agenda at the World Press Freedom Day.

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Why are "Journalists" so loved and esteemed? Why should they
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on May 1, 2007 6:38 PM   
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have more rights than any other person? Why should we need "press credentials" to get the nice treatment and access to politicans, public events, sporting events, and the like? Why should "journalists" get any better treatment than any other person in a war zone? Most journalists simply tow the company line (literally since they work for global conglomerates and corporations). They accept, without question, "leaks" from "government" sources (essentially publishing whatever the govt wishes). They gin up wars (for centuries now.) They love to point out the ethnicity of every criminal, usually in ominous tones ("a large black male is suspected of the rape and murder of lovely 19yr old coed....). They expect better protections than normal people (most normal people with any kind of heart would help a starving child- not take pictures. Would report a crime- not refuse to divulge a source. Would report corruption- not just quote "an anonymous official". Would take a side on an issue or war that is clear cut, not "show both sides of the argument".) They don't deserve our respect much less the special treatment. Everyone should be able to post news, write news, do investigations, etc. With the radio, shortwave, low power FM, and cheap copy machines this is becoming so and the mainstream press is angling to become important again.......

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Needed: Reminders Every Day
Posted by: StuartH on May 2, 2007 9:18 AM   
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Many people forget that the First Amendment was born of
astonishing, miraculous practical wisdom.

Journalists and the entire field of those who practice some
variation on the theme of public dissemination of relevant
information need special protection so that the principle of
Freedom of Speech can be kept as inviolate as possible.
If it is only in the form of posthumous recognition, it at
least reminds people of what was done and the injustice
of it. That is part of the struggle for social justice.

In our era, unfortunately, the economic contraints of
operating large scale media organizations, especially the
technologically expensive electronic forms, have led to
a situation in which the Fourth Estate is essentially
holding the "Body Politick" hostage and is reaping huge
ransom.

A process of decentralizing media to get away from the
economic constraints of central organization is beginning.

There is a central dilemma between easy access to media
that promotes mediocrity and amateurism; and the central
structuring that promotes skill and career support.

That dilemma isn't something a committee is going to
resolve. More participation and diversity is needed in
the public dialogue. How it happens matters less than
that it does.

Each of us has to resolve to become more critical as
consumers, and to take on whatever level of responsibility
we can in order to become better at participating in a
decentralization process.

The internet has become quite a bit better as a medium
of exchange for public information year by year. It has
only been around for a short time, so this has great and
hopeful potential.

But this is everyone's fight and it must be engaged in on
every possible level.

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Yar...well. May 1 was U.S. Law-ish Day...and we celebrated by hosting illegal...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 2, 2007 10:51 PM   
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...immigrants, and sponsoring their right to take up banners in reverence of their irreverence of our laws.

Perhaps fitting. Perhaps not.

In any case, I'm "stupid-dayed" out, but thanks for asking.

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NOT just Journalists face jail time
Posted by: wawa on May 3, 2007 4:34 AM   
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On April 30, 2007 , in the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court, Mordechai Vanunu, who blew the whistle on Israel's WMD Program, was convicted on 14 -out of 21- counts of violating a court order prohibiting him from speaking to foreign journalists in 2004.

Vanunu has been held under the draconian 1945 British Mandate State of Emergency Regulations, which forbids him from leaving Israel and speaking to media and foreigners, these last three years since his release from 18 years in jail-most of it in solitary.

Following the verdict, Vanunu pointed out, "Perhaps I should turn to the Queen or Tony Blair for justice."

Vanunu and the world will learn in about two weeks, how much more time he will spend behind bars for speaking his mind in a Mid East 'Democracy'.


This civilian journalist also wonders if Vanunu will next stand trial for "30 Minutes with Vanunu" which has been freely streaming on WAWA since May 2006

http://www.wearewideawake.org/

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Well,
Posted by: Roverton on May 3, 2007 10:12 AM   
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I'm certainly glad that freedom of the Press gets one single day of celebration.

If our prees is actually free anymore, then they must've forgotten how to use it because our media is leaving out lots of very important stories.

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powhatten
Posted by: xtiml on May 3, 2007 6:01 PM   
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the myth of the american free press is writtien all over the silly face of this moron.we have the best journalists money can buy.. now there is a thing called the american media but it is a tool of disseminating the furtherunce of who bought them.such tidy bits of information in maerican mass media is a moronic fairytale written in sordid crime stories sports and weather.it keeps us irritatingly diverted and efforts side tracked and thoughts dummied down. well 95% of you media munchers anyways, the rest are either good or or unaware of what they are doing.or do it and are aware. go keep your silence with and for the bilderburgers and join them in there rape of humans on earth. oh i forgot you allready did.

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Ergonomic
Posted by: Balans on May 20, 2007 2:35 AM   
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Nearly all page of this World Press Freedom Day spoke EXACTLY my thoughts.

A GREAT ARTICLE!.

Thanks, capisco

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