Thursday, December 22, 2016

In 2016 Journalists Fled Yemen & Burundi, CPJ Like UN Omits S Sudan Gatluak


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, December 19, more (NYT)  here -- On the killing of journalists in 2016, both Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and the Committee to Protect Journalists issues reports within minutes of each other this morning, with RSF putting the death toll at 74 and CPJ under-counting at 48.
   RSF explained, “this is fewer than in 2015, when 101 journalists were killed. But the fall is not encouraging because it is due largely to the fact many journalists have fled countries that became too dangerous, especially Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Afghanistan and Burundi.”
    In Burundi, journalist Jean Bigirimana is still “missing.”
   CPJ, by contrast, mentioned only Syria and the Middle East in its press release. And in its count of journalists killed in 2016, CPJ does not count for example South Sudan journalist John Gatluak, executed in the Terrain in Juba. Because ethnic? 
The United Nations' Cammaert / cover up report on its failures in Terrain also does not mention Gatluak. It's like the UN Censorship Alliance. Click here for video of Inner City Press' live-Periscope camera being grabbed, thrown and smashed by "journalists" on December 16 on Wall Street. Who watches the watchers?
  When the International Press Freedom Awards were given on November 22 at the Waldorf Astoria, only three of the four awardees could be present. Egyptian photojournalist Mahmoud Abou Zeid, known as Shawkan, is still imprisoned by the al-Sisi government.
    Three avenues east of the Waldorf at the United Nations, one of al-Sisi's state media Akhbar al Yom is being awarded the longtime work space of investigative Inner City Press, which outgoing Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and his head of Public Information Cristina Gallach ousted and evicted earlier this year. 
  For nine months, Inner City Press has only been allowed to cover UN General Assembly events when accompanied by a minder, often unavailable or withdrawn in the middle of reporting.
   The UN Secretariat's ambivalent stance to press freedom -- Ban Ki-moon has for example not taken any public question at UN headquarters in more than a month -- has been raised to the IPFA's sponsor, the Committee to Protect Journalists. 
  To the surprise of some, and ironic now when compared to CPJ's Trump statements, CPJ did not challenge the UN Secretariat as for example the DC-based Government Accountability Project did. CPJ said told Inner City Press that it only works on cases of life and death.
At @PressFreedom event, awardees with  signs; we agree & note UN evicted ICP to put Egyptian state media in

   Now that CPJ has become even closed to - accredited in - the United Nations, perhaps they will do more. For now, beyond Shakwan CPJ has given awards to Can Dundar, Malini Subramaniam and Oscar Martinez of the online El Faro in El Salvador. It'd be nice, too, to hear of Jean Bigirimana in Burundi, for example. Watch this site.