Index on Censorship
Friday, 18 October 2024
Memorial to murdered investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia at the foot of the Great Siege Monument in Valletta, Malta. Photo by Ethan Doyle White

Hello, readers. This is Sarah Dawood here, editor of Index on Censorship. Every week, we bring the most pertinent global free speech stories to your inbox. 

I must confess that today’s newsletter is very bleak, so I won’t be offended if you click away in search of a more optimistic end to your week. We’re reflecting on how journalists are increasingly being silenced globally, not only with the threat of legal retribution or imprisonment, but with death - often with little or no repercussions for those responsible.

This week marked the seven-year anniversary of the murder of Maltese investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was killed in a car bomb attack on 16 October 2017. She reported extensively on corruption in Malta, as well as on international scandals such as the Panama Papers (the historic data leak exposing how the rich exploit secret offshore tax regimes). 

Two hitmen were convicted for her murder in 2022, but criminal proceedings are still ongoing against three more suspects, including the alleged mastermind of the assassination and the alleged bomb suppliers. This week, free speech organisations signed an open letter to Malta’s prime minister calling on him to promptly implement robust, internationally-sound legal reform to keep journalists safe in future. The letter pointed to a public inquiry into her death, which found it was both “predictable and preventable”, and highlighted “the failure of the authorities to take measures to protect her”.

The start of this month marked another grim milestone - six years since the death of prominent Saudi journalist Jamal Ahmad Khashoggi. He was a regular contributor to major news outlets like Middle East Eye and The Washington Post, as well as editor-in-chief at the former Bahrain-based Al-Arab News Channel. A vocal critic of his government, he was assassinated at a Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey.

Such attacks on free speech continue. We were appalled, for instance, to learn of the death of the 27-year-old Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna last week, a reporter from the front-line of the Russia-Ukraine war who had written for Index about her experiences. The circumstances around her death are still unknown, but we know she died in Russian detention.

Increasingly, governments or powerful individuals act with impunity – whereby their human rights violations are exempt from punishment – willfully ignoring international law that states journalists are civilians and have a “right to life”. For many victims, the course of justice is either delayed, as in Caruana Galizia’s case, or the circumstances around their deaths are obfuscated and murky, as in Roshchyna’s. Question marks remain over who is ultimately responsible, or how it happened, creating a cycle of censorship whereby it’s not only the journalists and their reporting that are silenced, but their deaths.

This impunity has been shown in plain sight throughout the Israel-Hamas war. To date, 123 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza by Israeli forces, with the Committee to Protect Journalists concluding that at least five were intentionally targeted. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) deny these claims, yet an Al Jazeera documentary recently revealed that journalists live in fear of their lives, and their families’. One of the most high-profile cases of a targeted attack was that of Hamza al-Dahdouh, the son of Al Jazeera Gaza bureau chief and veteran journalist Wael al-Dahdouh, whose wife and another two children were also previously killed in Israeli airstrikes. Two Israeli and three Lebanese journalists have also been killed in the conflict, with the International Criminal Court seeking arrest warrant applications for both Israeli and Hamas leaders for war crimes. 

All these cases show a growing disregard for journalists’ lives, but also for the very essence of journalism itself. When not threatened with death or physical violence, media personnel are threatened with imprisonment, the closing of legitimate news offices, internet blackouts, and psychological and financial abuse. SLAPPs - strategic lawsuits against public participation - for instance, are being increasingly used globally by powerful and wealthy people as an abusive legal tool to threaten journalists into silence with eye-watering fines. How can “the fourth estate” truly hold power to account, when those in power can so easily dismantle and destroy their means of doing so?

At a time of devastating global conflict, the ability for journalists to report on stories free from the threat of harm, imprisonment, lawsuits or death has never been more important. To protect journalism itself, international and national law must work harder to protect the individuals most at risk. Without the threat of retribution for powerful individuals, the cycle of censorship will only continue.

Sarah Dawood, Editor

Help support Index on Censorship

Be nice, or you’re not coming in

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is greeted by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he arrives at the Presidential Palace in New Delhi, India, Friday, Feb. 23, 2018. Photo by Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP/Alamy

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau has accused India of making a “horrific mistake” in violating Canadian sovereignty at an inquiry into the death of Hardeep Singh Nijjar. Salil Tripathi wrote about the case earlier this year and says the Indian government is revoking the status of its overseas citizens and denying visas for those critical of Modi.

The show must go on

A still from the documentary While We Watched about Ravish Kumar’s struggles to tell the truth at NDTV. Two months after it was made, Kumar resigned to set up his own YouTube channel. Photo by Britdoc Films / Courtesy Everett Collection

Ravish Kumar was one of the biggest independent voices of Indian channel NDTV before he dramatically resigned to set up his own YouTube channel in 2022. Vrinda Sharma has been at his side ever since. Here she writes about the experience for Index on Censorship.

Join us at our Dublin conference on 24 October. Full agenda available here.

Georgian dream – or nightmare?

Tbilisi, capital of Georgia, Caucasus. Photo by MehmetO / Alamy Stock Photo

Ahead of a national election next week, Index CEO Jemimah Steinfeld visited Georgia's capital Tbilisi. She observed that the country, formerly one of the most liberal in the post-Soviet bloc, could be on a path to autocracy. Read her thoughts on the country's situation here.

On Tuesday, 29 October, Index will launch its latest magazine issue, Inconvenient Truths: How Scientists are Being Silenced Around the World, with a panel discussion at Liverpool John Moores University.  A panel of scientists, researchers, and journalists will come together for a discussion on the multiple forces working to silence scientists and discredit science today. 

With speakers Paul Garner, MB BS MD, professor emeritus in evidence-based public health in infectious diseases, and Dr Hannah Little, a lecturer in communication and media at the University of Liverpool and a director of Open Rights Group, a UK-based digital rights advocacy organisation. Moderated by Sarah Dawood, editor of Index on Censorship. More speakers to be announced shortly. 

Book your free ticket here.

Ukraine: Index and partners mourn death and demand justice for Victoria Roshchyna

Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna who died in Russia during transfer from Taganrog prison. Photo by Facebook/IPI

Index on Censorship, the Media Freedom Rapid Response (MFRR) and partner organizations have issued a statement following the death of Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna, who died in unclear circumstances while in Russian detention, and whose death was confirmed by Russian and Ukrainian authorities last Thursday. We welcome the opening of an investigation by Ukrainian authorities on grounds of “war crime combined with premeditated murder” and demand that Russian authorities do the same to elucidate the circumstances of Roshchyna’s death and bring to justice all those who could be responsible.

From the Index archives

Fighting back against the menace of SLAPPs
by Jessica Ní Mhainín
Spring 2021

 

Earlier this week, the UK Anti-SLAPP Coalition, of which Index is a co-chair, held an event at the Houses of Parliament to call for the introduction of a standalone bill to tackle vexatious lawsuits. Our archive piece this week, written by Index's head of policy and campaigns in 2021, looked at these lawsuits and their use against Maltese investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia before and after her death.  

Find out about next week's Anti-SLAPP Conference in Dublin here.

Help support Index on Censorship
Index on Censorship defends people's freedom to express themselves without fear of harm or persecution. We publish censored writers and artists, monitor and campaign against censorship, and encourage debate.  

We rely on donations from readers and supporters. By donating to Index you help us to protect freedom of expression and to support those who are denied that right.
 
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

INDEX ON CENSORSHIP © COPYRIGHT 2024
Privacy and Cookie Policy