PAKISTAN/SRI LANKA
#Fight Impunity,
defend your right to information on Saleem Shahzad and Prageeth Eknaligoda!
Reporters Without
Borders is highlighting ten emblematic cases of impunity as part of its
#FightImpunity campaign for the first International Day to End Impunity for
Crimes against Journalists. The aim is to involve the general public and step
up pressure on governments to bring those responsible for these crimes to
justice.
When the UN General
Assembly created International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against
Journalists on 13 December 2013, it designated 2 November, the anniversary of
the murder of the two Radio France Internationale journalists,Ghislaine
Dupont and Claude Verlon in Kidal, Mali, in 2012.
Reporters Without
Borders has chosen these 10 cases to put names and faces to the tragic
statistics and to show the scale and different forms that impunity can take.
The resources deployed by authorities to solve these and many other cases have
been either non-existent or hopelessly inadequate. More than 90 percent of
crimes against journalists are never solved and therefore never punished.
These ten impunity cases are presented on a specially created website, http://fightimpunity.org. Some of the victims disappeared, such Mexican crime reporter María Esther Aguilar Casimbe, Abidjan-based French journalist Guy-André Kieffer, Iranian newspaper editor Pirouz Davani and Sri Lankan political analyst and cartoonist Prageeth Eknaligoda.
Some were murdered
such as Pakistani reporter Syed Saleem Shahzad, the young Serbian
journalist Dada Vujasinovic, the Beirut-based columnist Samir
Kassir and the Dagestani journalist Akhmednabi Akhmednabiyev,
who was gunned down in 2013.
Dawit Isaak, a journalist with Swedish and
Eritrean dual nationality, has been held incommunicado in Eritrean President
Issayas Aferworki’s hellish prison camps for the past 13 years, while police
officers tortured Bahraini reporter Nazeeha Saeed for covering
pro-democracy demonstrations.
“We must never
abandon journalists who are the victims of crimes, not even posthumously,”
Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire said. “The
ten impunity cases we are presenting are shocking examples of incompetence or
wilful inaction by officials who should be punishing despicable crimes against
those who have tried to describe reality as it is.
“Such a level of
impunity just encourages those who commit these abuses.
International Day to
End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists is an occasion for paying tribute
to the victims, reminding governments of their obligation to protect
journalists and combat impunity, and reminding those who target journalists
that one day they will be held to account for their actions.”
Whether killed
execution-style, blown-up by a bomb, tortured to death or disappeared, these
journalists paid the price for their commitment to freedom of information. They
were targeted for investigating corruption or drug trafficking, for criticizing
the government or intelligence agencies or for drawing attention to human
rights violations. Some of the cases have become emblematic, others are less
well known.
Those responsible
were many and varied, and include governments, armed groups and hit-men. RWB
blames the shortcomings of police and justice systems for the failures to solve
these cases or to convict the perpetrators and instigators.
Around 800
journalists have been killed in connection with their work in the past decade.
The deadliest year was 2012, with 88 journalists killed. The number of killed
fell slightly in 2013 but the figures for physical attacks and threats against
journalists continued to rise. At total of 56 journalists have been killed
since the start of 2014.
RWB’s recommendations
To combat impunity,
Reporters Without Borders is calling for the creation of the position of
special adviser to the UN secretary-general on the safety of journalists.
Creating such a post
at the heart of the UN system would enable monitoring and verification of
states’ compliance with their obligations under UN Security Council Resolution
1738 and the General Assembly resolution of 18 December 2013.
Adopted on 23
December 2006, Resolution 1738 reminds states of their “obligations under
international law to end impunity.” The resolution passed by the UN General
Assembly on 18 December 2013 calls on states to conduct “impartial, speedy and
effective investigations into all alleged violence against journalists (...) to
bring the perpetrators of such crimes to justice and ensure that victims have
access to appropriate remedies.”
A resolution adopted
by the UN Human Rights Council on 19 September called in similar terms for an
end to impunity. A proper international monitoring and verification mechanism
is needed so that all these resolutions can be implemented.
RWB is also calling
for an amendment to article 8 of the International Criminal Court’s statute so
that deliberate attacks on journalists, media workers and associated personnel
are defined as war crimes. As a member of the French coalition of the ICC,
it is urging states to pass legislation allowing them, under the principle
of universal jurisdiction, to prosecute those in their territory
who committed grave crimes in another country.
The European Court of
Human Rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights have ruled that
respect for freedom of information not only requires states to abstain from
arbitrarily interfering in the use of the right to information but also
requires them to protect journalists and prosecute those who target them.
RWB calls on states
to implement these provisions by conducting immediate, effective and
independent investigations into attacks against journalists and prosecuting
those responsible.
The authorities that
conduct these investigations must be able to resist any political, diplomatic
or technical pressure or obstacles they may encounter. In some ongoing cases,
RWB has seen how the threat of ending a judicial investigation represents a
victory for impunity.
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