
This year’s
celebrations come amid the debilitating Covid-19 pandemic that has
redefined life as we know it. As noted by the UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Opinion, a free and independent
media is especially important during a public health crisis such as
this.
It plays a central role in providing information
to people most likely to be affected, can monitor national and
international responses and promote transparency and accountability in
the delivery of necessary public health measures. The media can also
serve to relay key messages from those affected back to policymakers and
other important stakeholders.
Government rightly
categorised the media as an essential service. Sadly, several
journalists have, during the lockdown, been victims to assault and
arrest, with some having their equipment damaged. Some were forced to
delete video and photo images on their cameras.
Clearly,
the pandemic has brought to the fore the tensions between freedom of
expression and public health, between accountability/transparency and
the opaqueness that often goes with emergency responses. But the media’s
challenges are not only about the safety and security of journalists,
but also the very survival of the businesses.
Covid-19
poses an existential threat to a media industry that was already under
stress from the disruption brought by the digital revolution and the
rise of social media as major sources of news for millions of people.
With it also came the spread of misinformation and disinformation that
has compromised the public integrity and credibility of the media.
The
collapse of print circulation and advertising revenues during the
lockdown is putting pressure on media houses’ revenues and, in some
cases, forcing drastic action such as closure, lay-offs or pay cuts.
While these are expected to be temporary, they reflect an underlying
business model that is under strain and needs to be reinvented. This is
the time to work towards and remind the country of the importance of
free and independent media that provide accurate information, facilitate
public debate and hold officialdom to account.
We reiterate the call on government(s) by freedom of expression
international experts not to take advantage of the pandemic to punish
independent and critical media and to introduce restrictions on the
access and scrutiny by media of government decisions and actions.
We
also call upon the public to support media houses to ensure that they
remain viable and sustainable sources of credible and relevant
journalism.
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