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2015 Golden Pen honours Journalists Killed in the Line of Duty

2015-03-03. Behind the ceremony and the award, the lives of the laureates are ones of extraordinary personal courage and self-sacrifice, with stories of imprisonment, beatings, bombings, censorship, exile and murder.

by WAN-IFRA Staff executivenews@wan-ifra.org | March 3, 2015

One of the objectives of the Golden Pen is to turn the spotlight of public attention on repressive governments and highlight the journalists who fight them. Often, the laureate is still actively engaged in the struggle for freedom of expression, and is sometimes still imprisoned at the time of the awards ceremony, as was the case of last year’s winner, Ethiopian journalist Eskinder Nega, who unfortunately remains in prison as of this writing.

The Pen has, on several occasions, secured the release of a publisher or journalist from jail or afforded him or her a degree of protection against further persecution.

 

Today, with killings and imprisonments of journalists around the world continuing with alarming regularity, the significance of the award has never been higher and press freedom efforts never more needed.

 

This year, rather than singling out a specific individual or institution, the Golden Pen of Freedom for 2015 will recognise all Journalists Killed in the Line of Duty. We have made this decision based on the following key facts:

 

  • There has never been a more dangerous time for journalists. They are being killed and imprisoned worldwide in record numbers.
  • They face daily threats, attacks and intimidation from private individuals, non-state agents, and government officials who seek to silence them. The overwhelming majority of these crimes are committed with impunity.
  • Those responsible for 9 out of 10 journalist murders go unpunished.

 

1,100 journalists killed since 1992, but few perpetrators have been brought to justice

 

An estimated 1,110 journalists have been killed since 1992. Of these, 715 were murdered outright and their killers have, for the most part, evaded punishment. Reporting on corruption, crime, conflict, politics, and human rights has proven deadly for far too many. Threats and kidnappings escalate into killings, a fatal yet avoidable outcome cemented by weak or indifferent authorities who feed a cycle of impunity.

 

As the Committee to Protect Journalists has stated: In 90 per cent of the cases, no perpetrator has been brought to justice, and this silencing message fosters self-censorship. It weakens the ability of the press to hold power to account and suppresses public scrutiny of sensitive issues.

 

If those same deadly numbers existed in any other profession that impacts how we define and understand our world, one would expect the outcry to be emphatic, the investigations relentless, and the commitment to reversing the trend universally forthcoming as they should be.

 

Imagine if politicians, lawmakers or religious leaders were being similarly targeted, with the same frequency, in such repetitive circumstances. Think what the impact such crimes would have on society, and how it would affect you.

 

An exceptional award in exceptional circumstances

 

In honour of fallen colleagues and to focus the international spotlight on the issue of safety and impunity for journalists worldwide, awarding the Golden Pen of Freedom to Journalists Killed in the Line of Duty sends a powerful message to the perpetrators of crimes against the media as well as to legislators and those with the power to enact better laws and enforce stronger protections for news gatherers around the world.

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