On the first anniversary of Dom and Bruno’s killings last year, the Guardian joined an international collaboration to amplify their work, while a group of Dom’s journalist friends, including myself, are also currently working on a crowd-funded project to finish the book that he was working on at the time of his death: How to Save the Amazon: Ask the People Who Know, which will be published next year.
The number of environmental journalists being attacked or killed is rising and it continues to be one of the most dangerous fields of journalism after war reporting. Though the trend is accelerating, prosecutions remain dismally low, with very few cases of murdered environmental reporters leading to convictions.
Instead, the law appears to be increasingly used against journalists. One of the most disturbing trends in recent years has been the arrests or police harassment of journalists covering environmental protests. This has stirred outrage in the UK, the Netherlands, France, Spain, Canada, Australia, Azerbaijan, the United States and China which is consistently the biggest jailer of reporters.
Thanks to readers who financially support our work, as well as our unique trust-owned model, the Guardian can take an independent line on these existential issues. If you could back our reporting today we will be able to do more to tell stories that wouldn’t otherwise be told – and to advocate for a free press around the world.
This week we will be marking Friday’s World Press Freedom Day with a series of reports and features about different threats posed to all types of reporters. Without the courage of correspondents to continue working in conflict areas, press organisations warn the world will start to see “zones of silence” where the risks are so great that important stories go unreported.
This is much more than a matter of principle; solidarity is a matter of survival.
The risks may be growing, and the space to operate may be increasingly constrained, but we are more determined than ever to tell the stories of our age so that you, the readers, have the information to act as voters, citizens, consumers and participants in the web of life on Earth.
Thank you for reading. |