Categories
Press Freedom

November 30 ā€“ December 6

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of November 30, 2024.

12 Senators write to Sec. Blinken: ā€œprioritize journalistsā€™ immediate access to Gazaā€

12 Senators, led by Brian Schatz and including Bernie Sanders, Tim Kaine, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Cory Booker and others, have sent a letter to US Secretary Antony Blinken asking him to ā€œprioritize journalists immediate access to Gazaā€.

ā€œSince October 7, 2023, over 130 journalists have been killed, the vast majority of whom were Palestinians killed in Gaza.5,6 The lack of safe working conditions for journalists in Gaza makes it almost impossible to have an accurate understanding of the humanitarian devastation taking place in the territory.ā€

ā€œThe United States must make clear to Israel that targeting media organizations and members of the press is unacceptable. It is also important that the United States support UN efforts calling for accountability and protection of journalists in Gaza and the West Bank.ā€

Trump advisers renew push for pardon of NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden

Washington Post reports that ā€œSnowden pardon has been a topic of discussion among people working on Trumpā€™s presidential transition since the electionā€. Matt Gaetz, former congressman, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trumpā€™s Health and Human Services secretary pick and Tulsi Gabbard, Director of National Intelligence pick have all raised the issue of Snowdenā€™s pardon.

ā€œI have discussed the matter with others in and around the transition, and there seemed to be pretty broad support for a pardonā€, said Gaetz.

Israel kills another Palestinian journalist

Palestinian journalist Mamdouh Kaneetah was killed in an Israeli air strike on Gaza, taking the overall death toll since October last year to 191, writes Middle East Monitor.

Israel attacks journalists in Lebanon hours after ceasefire begins

Israeli forces fired on two locations in southern Lebanon just hours after a much-vaunted ceasefire agreement began.

In the southern town of Khiam they opened fire on two journalists, both of whom were wounded and have been hospitalized for their injuries, reports TruthOut.

Categories
Press Freedom

November 15-22, 2024

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of November 15, 2024.

Attacks on journalists in Gaza continue

Palestinian photojournalist Ahmed Abu Shariya was killed in an Israeli airstrike on November 19, making him the 136th journalist killed in Gaza since October 2023 according to International Federation of Journalists.

On November 20, the Israeli forces deliberately targeted Hossam Shabat, one of the last journalists reporting from north Gaza, after the Israeli military publicly threatened him with assassination in October.

Jailed Whistleblower David McBride speaks from prison

Addressing the Walkleys award ceremony on a video call from prison, McBride said that whistleblower protection laws, freedom of information laws and fair work laws all do the opposite their names suggest. In an interview he gave for the ABC he speaks about his time in prison and stresses that it is a price he has to pay for what he believes in.

“People who are actually, genuinely exposing problems with the government are classified as criminals and put in jail ā€¦ it’s very, very dangerous.”

Israel has a long history of smearing journalists

Israel is smearing Palestinian journalists with unsubstantiated ā€˜terroristā€™ labels, a tactic used to justify its attacks on them and discredit Palestinian journalists more broadly, writes Jodie Ginsberg, the chief executive officer of the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Journalists under fire in the U.S.

The International Womenā€™s Media Foundation recently surveyed 610 journalists across 11 states. The data revealed a shocking number of threats to American journalistsā€™ safety and well-being.

Categories
Press Freedom

November 8-14, 2024

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of November 8, 2024.

Senate Democrats running out of time to pass PRESS Act

The PRESS (Protect Reporters from Exploitative State Spying Act) Act, which would prevent federal agencies from using subpoenas and warrants to target journalists and their sourcesā€”except under rare, specific circumstancesā€”still lingers in Congress, despite having passed the House of Representatives nearly one year ago.

With only weeks left to legislate, WIRED reports, press advocates are urging Senate Democrats to pass the bill before the end of the lame-duck session.

IFEX stands in solidarity with the Palestinian and Lebanese journalists

IFEX, a global network of more than 119 organizations working to defend and promote freedom of expression and human rights has issued a statement of solidarity with the Palestinian and Lebanese journalists reporting amid life-threatening risks. IFEX demands that all governments, press freedom organisations, and human rights bodies take concrete steps to ensure their protection.

“The deliberate targeting of journalists is a grave violation of International Law and a direct threat to any sort of accountability for on the ground human rights violations. Immediate, unfettered access for international journalists, alongside robust protections for all media workers, is crucial in ending this campaign against the truth and those who risk their lives to document it.”

Two more Palestinian journalists murdered in Gaza City

Two Palestinian journalists, siblings Ahmad Abu Sakhil and Zahra Abu Sakhil, have been killed in an Israeli attack on a school sheltering displaced Palestinians in Gaza City, rising the number of journalists killed to 188.

Journalists in Gaza continue to face unprecedented risks as they try to cover the conflict, including Israeli airstrikes, famine, displacement, destruction and deliberate targeting.

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Press Freedom

November 1-7, 2024

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of November 1, 2024.

Press freedom groups react to Trump’s re-election

Donald Trump is poised to return to the White House as the 47th president of the United States, and press freedom groups – Committee to Protect Journalists, Freedom of the Press Foundation, Defending Rights & Dissent and others – are sounding the alarm early about what his election means for the state of journalism in the U.S. and around the world.

Courage Foundation joins these groups in standing up for truthtellers, for journalistsā€™ right to publish, and for your right to know, regardless of which party is in power.

Article 19 calls for an end to impunity for crimes against journalists in Palestine and Lebanon

To mark the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists on 2 November, ARTICLE 19 calls for an end to the persistent pattern of impunity for crimes committed against journalists in Palestine and Lebanon, including at least 134 killings to date.

In demanding accountability for all crimes against journalists targeted for their work, Article 19 calls for Israel to ensure the safety of all journalists, refrain from targeting them or media infrastructure in Gaza, grant foreign media full access to Gaza and investigate all attacks on journalists in Palestine and Lebanon; the ICC to to prioritise its investigation into the deliberate targeting and killing of journalists in Palestine and Lebanon; and International courts and accountability mechanisms, including the ICC and the ICJ, to consider that Israelā€™s killing of journalists enables the commission of atrocities during this conflict.

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Call to Action Journalism Legislation News Whistleblowing

Trump’s re-election and the war on journalism

Donald Trump is poised to return to the White House as the 47th president of the United States, and press freedom groups are sounding the alarm early about what his election means for the state of journalism in the U.S. and around the world. Courage joins these groups in standing up for truthtellers, for journalistsā€™ right to publish, and for your right to know, regardless of which party is in power.

Trumpā€™s record on media freedom in his first term was infamously bleak. Beyond calling the press ā€œthe enemy of the people,ā€ Trump viciously attacked news outlets and individual journalists whose coverage he didnā€™t like and weaponized the state in an effort to silence them. He surveilled reporters, banned outlets from press briefings, and persecuted leakers. In 2017, Trump called on the Federal Communications Commission to revoke the licenses of ABC, NBC, and other news stations, a threat he renewed in the 2024 campaign. 

And of course the biggest assault on press freedom at least since the 1972 Pentagon Papers was the Trump Administrationā€™s indictment of WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange. In 2019, Trumpā€™s Justice Department levied 17 counts under the Espionage Act against Assange, including charges for soliciting, possessing, and publishing classified documents in the public interest, escalating the Obama Administrationā€™s war on whistleblowers to a full-blown war on journalism.

Campaign threats foreshadow dangerous second term

It appears we can expect more of the same in Trumpā€™s second stint in office. Defending Rights & Dissent writes about the policy plans of Trump and his associates:

 ā€œ[Trumpā€™s] close supporters have put together a plan to crack down on pro-Palestine protesters, surveil journalists, and jail whistleblowers. And Trump has made clear he wants to violate the First Amendment by criminalizing flag burning and deporting activists.

They have declared their intent to abuse laws like RICO to silence those who support Palestinian rights and hire more FBI counterintelligence agents to spy on journalists so the government can unmask and imprison whistleblowers.ā€

When Trumpā€™s CIA went so far as to draw up plans to kidnap and even assassinate Assange while he was detained in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, Mike Pompeo was at the helm. Trump brought Pompeo along for several major rallies at the close of the 2024 campaign, and initial reports suggested his name was floated for another cabinet position. Just days after being reelected, however, Trump announced preemptively that Pompeo (as well as fellow neocon and former Ambassador Nikki Haley) will not be in his new administration — though he praised Pompeo’s work in Trump’s first term.

More explicitly, Reporters Without Borders found that Trump has verbally threatened the press more than 100 times on the campaign trail, including suggesting he wouldnā€™t mind if journalists at his rally were shot.

The Committee for the Protection of Journalists, reporting on the massive increase in attacks on the press in the last year, ā€œfound that the hostile media climate fostered during Donald Trumpā€™s presidency has left a legacy that poses great risks to media inside and outside the country.ā€

While the Biden Administration has made some important changes in the intervening years, including Attorney General Merrick Garland’s revision of the DOJā€™s policies to prohibit subpoenas for journalists (with narrow exceptions), they have done nothing to truly protect sources and journalists more permanently. The Assange case ended in a plea deal under Biden and Garland, rather than a dropped indictment, instilling a chilling effect on investigative journalists around the world, and the Espionage Act remains at Trumpā€™s disposal, with no public interest defense available to protect defendants in court.

Furthermore, both administrations fully support funding and arming the ongoing killing of Palestinian journalists at an unprecedented rate amid Israeliā€™s assault on Gaza and Lebanon.

Biden could still pass the PRESS Act

Bidenā€™s lame-duck Congress could still enact policy changes to protect reporters. Chief among them is getting the Senate to pass the Protect Reporters from Exploitative State Spying (PRESS) Act, which passed in the House unanimously and which would severely curtail the governmentā€™s ability to surveil reporters. The Freedom of the Press Foundationā€™s Trevor Timm said,

ā€œThe Senate should immediately pass, and President Biden should sign, the bipartisan PRESS Act to stop Trump from spying on journalists, as he repeatedly did in his first term, and from throwing them in jail for refusing to reveal their sources, as he has threatened in the most disgusting terms.

Congress must make good on promises to fix dangerous and sloppily drafted mass surveillance legislation passed earlier this year that gives the U.S. government extraordinary power to spy on its own citizens.

And lawmakers must take a vocal stand against abusing anti-terrorism laws to punish free speech. Itā€™s imperative the White House reverses its spineless position on Israel’s unprecedented attacks on press freedom and pressure its ally to stop using U.S. weapons to kill journalists.ā€

Support press freedom and those defending it

Whether the Biden Administration and the outgoing Congress pass these protections or not, press freedom groups will continue to fight back in the war on journalism throughout Trumpā€™s second term. Courage has been partnering with many of these groups on a range of issues ā€” from the prosecution of Julian Assange to the widespread killing of Palestinian journalists ā€” in an effort to speak out en masse, our collective voices louder than each of us on our own. We encourage you to support these organizations as youā€™re able, as the need for solidarity will only grow.

Categories
Press Freedom

October 25-31, 2024

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of October 25, 2024.

Haiti and Israel most likely to let journalists’ murders go unpunished, CPJ’s 2024 Global Impunity Index shows

Haiti and Israel are the worldā€™s biggest offenders in letting journalistsā€™ murderers go unpunished, according to Committee to Protect Journalistsā€™ 2024 Global Impunity Index.

In Haiti, ranked No. 1, gang violence, poverty, and political instability have contributed to the failure to hold killers to account. Israel, ranked No. 2, has killed a record number of Palestinian journalists, including in targeted attacks. CPJ has documented the murder of five journalists ā€“ four Palestinian and one Lebanese ā€“ since the war began, and is investigating the possible targeted murders of 10 more journalists.

Three media workers killed in Israeli attack in southern Lebanon

An Israeli air strike has killed three journalists in their accommodation in Hasbaiyya, southern Lebanon, Al Jazeera reported. The victims were identified as cameraman Ghassan Najjar and engineer Mohamed Reda who worked for Al Mayadeen, and camera operator Wissam Qassim who worked for Al-Manar TV.

The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned Israel’s killing of three journalists in southern Lebanon.

Three journalists killed in northern Gaza

Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS) reported the killing of another three journalists in Gaza. Saed Radwan, Hamza Abu Salmiya and Haneen Mahmoud Baroud lost their lives in an Israeli airstrike that hit Asmaa ‘B’ School in Al-Shati refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip. 

Together with PJS, International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) condemned the killings and continued attacks on journalists and called for an immediate investigation into their deaths.

Categories
Press Freedom

October 19-25, 2024

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of October 19, 2024.

Press freedom groups urge DOJ to drop all charges against Indian Time reporter Isaac White

21 press freedom organizations have written to District Attorney Gary Pasqua, calling on the DOJ to drop the charges brought against Indian Time reporter Isaac White arising from his arrest in May this year while covering a demonstration opposing a proposed settlement of a land claim by the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe.

White was not accused of doing anything illegal besides failing to disperse when police broke up the protest. The DOJ brought charges against White despite the fact that, under the First Amendment, police dispersing protesters canā€™t also disperse journalists covering the protests.

Outrage over Israelā€™s threats against six Al Jazeera journalists

Al Jazeera has strongly rejected a claim by the Israeli military that six of its journalists based in Gaza are members of the Palestinian groups Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, Defending Rights and Dissent, UN Special Rapporteur on Palestine, PEN International, Jewish Currents and others, have condemned Israel’s threats against the journalists, stressing that Israel has repeatedly made similar unproven claims without producing credible evidence, such as in the case of Al Jazeera journalists Ismail Al-Ghoul, who was subsequently murdered by the Israeli military.

Sanders leads call for DOJ to investigate Israeli attack on journalists

Sen. Bernie Sanders and 11 Democrats are urging President Biden, Secretary of State Blinken and Attorney General Garland to open a formal investigation into an Israeli airstrike that injured American journalist more than a year ago.

Earlier this month, CPJ issued a report finding that there’s still no accountability for targeted Israeli attack that killed Issam Abdallah and injured six journalists, including one U.S. citizen in southern Lebanon.

65 House Democrats send letter to Biden urging unimpeded media access to Gaza, 19 press freedom and human rights organizations support it

Rep. Jim McGovern has led 64 of House Democrats in a letter to President Biden and Secretary of State Blinken calling for the United States to push for Israel to allow unimpeded access for U.S. and international journalists to Gaza.

“At a time when reliable information is more critical than ever, the restrictions on foreign reporting undermine the very foundation of press freedom and democratic accountability.ā€

19 press freedom and human rights organizations, including Committee to Protect Journalists, Amnesty International USA, Freedom of the Press Foundation, PEN America, Reporters Without Borders and Courage Foundation, have supported a call from U.S. Congress members.

“We, therefore, ask that the U.S. government urge Israel to uphold its commitments to press freedom by providing foreign media with immediate, independent access to Gaza and abide by its international obligations to protect journalists as civilians.

UN expert: Freedom of expression threatened more seriously in Gaza than in any recent conflict

Irene Khan, the U.N. independent investigator on the right to freedom of opinion and expression, presented a report about global threats to freedom of expression arising from the conflict in Gaza. The report identifies three key threats to media freedom: deliberate targeting of journalists and attacks on the media; suppression of protests, dissent and pro-Palestinian speech, and widespread censorship in the name of fighting terrorism and antisemitism. Khan concludes that freedom of expression has been threatened more seriously in Gaza than in any recent conflict.

IFJ and NUJ condemn the rising use of counter-terrorism legislation against journalists

International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and UKā€™s National Union of Journalists (NUJ) have condemned the rising use of counter-terrorism legislation against journalists as an intimidatory measure harmful to public interest journalism and press freedom. They have recognized the raid of journalist Asa Winstanleyā€™s home as the latest in a string of targeted approaches by police officers using anti-terror legislation and contributing to a concerning police culture where the rights of journalists and their ability to ensure the safety of sources is placed at risk.

ā€œThe seizure of journalistic material and devices, the detention of journalists, and the failure of police to sufficiently outline reasons for the apparent pursuit of journalists has raised alarm among members of the public for its undermining impact on journalism and media freedom.ā€

Categories
Call to Action News Press Release

Drop charges against Indian Time journalist Isaac White

Courage has joined more than 20 national and local press freedom and civil liberties organizations calling on the DOJ to drop the charges brought against Indian Time reporter Isaac White. The charges arise from May this year when White was arrested while covering a demonstration opposing a proposed settlement of a land claim by the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe.

In a letter addressed to District Attorney Gary Pasqua, media freedom advocates emphasize that White was not accused of doing anything illegal besides failing to disperse when police broke up the protest. They point out that even according to DOJ’s own interpretation of the First Amendment, police dispersing protesters canā€™t also disperse journalists covering the protests, because how police respond to protests is news.

“The First Amendment requires that any restrictions on when, where, and how reporters gather information ‘leave open ample alternative channels’ for gathering the news. Law enforcement did not communicate a specific dispersal point for White or the others arrested that day, let alone one in a location from which White could effectively report.”

The signatories stress that the DOJ, courts, and legislatures must all recognize the rights of journalists to document how police respond to protests, and demand charges against White to be dropped.

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Daniel Hale News

Daniel Hale to receive the inaugural Ellsberg Whistleblower Award

The Reva and David Logan Foundation, the taz Panther Foundation, the Wau Holland Foundation and Whistleblower-Netzwerk announced the launch of the International Ellsberg Whistleblower Award, which “will be presented to individuals and organizations worldwide whose efforts have helped disclose information that significantly enhances free public or scientific debate, strengthening the publicā€™s right to know and thus democracy.”

The first to receive the International Ellsberg Whistleblower Award will be Courage Foundation beneficiary Daniel Hale, a former Air Force and NSA intelligence analyst who revealed the clandestine drone assassination program of the Obama administration. “His whistleblowing raised critical awareness about the balance between national security, the publicā€™s right to know, and ethics in modern warfare”, the founding organizations said, adding that “shortly before his passing, Daniel Ellsberg personally chose Hale to become the very first recipient of the Ellsberg Whistleblowing Award.”

In 2014, Hale passed classified U.S. military documents to reporters atĀ The Intercept, which subsequently published The Drone Papers, giving the public an unvarnished window into the secretive U.S. remote assassination program, including how it selects targets to kill based on poor evidence, due to which 9 out of 10 drone casualties were innocent bystanders. At the same time the government “masks the true number of civilians killed in drone strikes by categorizing unidentified people killed in a strike as enemies, even if they were not the intended targetsā€ (The Assassination Complex, The Intercept, October 15, 2015).

Commenting on his motivation, Hale explained: ā€œNo person should have to die for a crime that they did not commit. Just as no person should have to live with the burden of having taken a poor, defenseless, innocent life.ā€ For his whistleblowing, Hale was indicted under the 1917 US Espionage Act and convicted to a 45-month prison sentence in 2021. He was released from prison in February 2024 after serving 33 months of his sentence, from which he is now recovering.

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Press Freedom

October 12-18, 2024

This is the latest installment of our press freedom round-up, recapping the latest attacks on journalists, their right to publish, and our right to know. Hereā€™s the news for the week of October 12, 2024.

Daniel Hale to receive the inaugural Ellsberg Whistleblower Award

Daniel Hale is announced as the first recipient of the International Ellsberg Whistleblower Award launched by The Reva and David Logan Foundation, the taz Panther Foundation, the Wau Holland Foundation and Whistleblower-Netzwerk.

In 2014, Hale passed classified U.S. military documents to reporters atĀ The Intercept, upon whichĀ The InterceptĀ published The Drone Papers, giving the public an unvarnished window into the secretive U.S. remote assassination program, including how it selects targets to kill based on poor evidence, due to which 9 out of 10 drone casualties were innocent bystanders.

For his whistleblowing, Hale was indicted under the 1917 US Espionage Act and convicted to a 45-month prison sentence in 2021. He was released from prison in February 2024 after serving 33 months of his sentence, from which he is now recovering.

UK police raid home, seize devices of journalist Asa Winstanley

British counterterrorism police raided the home and seized several electronic devices belonging to The Electronic Intifadaā€™s associate editor Asa Winstanley.

A letter addressed to Winstanley from the ā€œCounter Terrorism Commandā€ of the Metropolitan Police Service indicates that the authorities are ā€œaware of your professionā€ as a journalist but that ā€œnotwithstanding, police are investigating possible offensesā€ under sections 1 and 2 of the Terrorism Act (2006). These provisions set out the purported offense of ā€œencouragement of terrorism.ā€

Earlier this year, a number of reporters and activists in the UK, among others independent journalists Richard Medhurst and Sarah Wilkinson, and Richard Barnard have been arrested and/or charged with violating the Terrorism Act.

Rep. Jim McGovern leading a letter urging Israel to allow independent access for journalists

Drop Site News, Defending Rights and Dissent and Just Foreign Policy have initiated an action to write to Congress in support of the Rep. Jim McGovern letter to President Biden and Secretary of State Anthony Blinken asking them to urge Israel to allow independent access for journalists.

“The absence of foreign media reporting has created significant challenges in obtaining accurate, verifiable information from Gaza, leading to increased skepticism about the limited reports that do emerge.”

Ukrainian journalist Viktoria Roshchina dies in in Russian captivity

Journalist Viktoria Roshchina reportedly died on September 19 while being transferred from southwestern city of Taganrog to Moscow for a prisoner exchange. Following the news of Roshchina’s death, Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) issued a statement demanding from Russian authorities to immediately disclose the circumstances surrounding Roshchina’s death in Russian captivity.

At least 16 journalists and media workers have been killed covering the war since Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to CPJ research.

Press freedom groups write to US embassy in Israel over detained US journalist Jeremy Loffredo

The Courage Foundation, Defending Rights & Dissent and the Freedom of the Press Foundation sent a letter to the US Embassy in Jerusalem over the ongoing detention of U.S. journalist Jeremy Loffredo.

“We, the undersigned press freedom and free expression organizations, are writing to express our urgent concern with the situation of US journalist Jeremy Loffredo.

“Loffredo was arrested for reporting on the impact of Iranian missile strikes in Israel. Loffredoā€™s actions were well within the standard realm of journalism and would have been protected by the First Amendment in the United States.

“Reporting news to the public that a government doesnā€™t like is not aiding the enemy. It is a hallmark of authoritarian regimes to equate independent journalism with aiding a foreign enemy.”

RCFP urges Congress to pass PRESS Act

Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press (RCFP) again urged members of Congress to pass a bipartisan shield bill that would establish robust federal protections for the newsgathering rights of journalists.

In separate letters sent to the U.S. Senate & U.S. House of Representatives RCFP and 107 press rights organizations expressed strong support for the PRESS Act, which passed the House in January and is currently pending in the Senate Judiciary Committee.