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Journalism in a changing world

Democracies warned of threats to freedom

By Andrew Grant-Adamson • May 3rd, 2007 • Category: Newspapers, Politics

It comes as something of a shock when an international organisation issues a statement on freedom, if you read it and realise that what it says is applicable to your own country.

But that is how a World Press Freedom Day letter from Timothy Balding, chief executive of the World Association of Newspapers, reads. Balding who hs been with WAN for more than 20 years, is British and started his career as a journalist, working both at the Oxford Mail and the Press Association.

Here is his letter in full:

Dear Reader,

Major terrorist attacks and threats against countries world-wide, particularly democracies, in recent years have led to the widespread tightening of security and surveillance measures.

The objective of these measures is laudable and compelling – the protection of citizens against threats to life and property. There is, however, a legitimate and growing concern that in too many instances such measures, whether old or newly introduced, are being used to stifle debate and the free flow of information about political decisions, or that they are being implemented with too little concern for the overriding necessity to protect individual liberties and, notably, freedom of the press.

Anti-terrorism and official secrets laws, criminalisation of speech judged to justify terrorism, criminal prosecution of journalists for disclosing classified information, surveillance of communications without judicial authorisation, restrictions on access to government data and stricter security classifications, all these measures can severely erode the capacity of journalists to investigate and report accurately and critically, and thus the ability of the press to inform.

Balancing the sometimes conflicting interests of security and freedom might indeed be difficult, but democracies have an absolute responsibility to use a rigorous set of standards to judge whether curbs on freedom can be justified by security concerns and should set them against the rights protected in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which guarantees freedom ‘to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers’.

This is the clear message we need to impress on governments and their agencies on World Press Freedom Day.

Timothy Balding
Chief Executive Officer
World Association of Newspapers

I trust Gordon Brown will take notice of these words.

Andrew Grant-Adamson is Andrew Grant-Adamson is a journalist who now teaches a new generation of writers, subs and editors at the University of Westminster.
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  1. Suw and I have had this conversation more times than I can remember lately: When did IT become the enemy? How many times can journalists not do their jobs because they’re locked out of their own la… Democracies warned of threats to freedom It comes as something of a shock when an international organisation issues a statement on freedom, if you read it and realise that what it says is applicable to your own country. But that is how a …

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