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MUMBAI:
The heads of BBC World Service, Deutsche Welle, Radio France Internationale,
Radio Netherlands Worldwide and the Voice of America have called
upon governments to honour the United Nations Declaration of Human
Rights and "end any and all practices that hamper the rights
of people everywhere to receive and impart information."
At
their annual meeting in Hilversum, the Netherlands, the directors
of the BBC World Service, Deutsche Welle, Radio France Internationale,
Radio Netherlands Worldwide and the Voice of America issued a
joint resolution denouncing what they termed growing trends towards
media restrictions and attacks on journalists in many of the countries
to which they broadcast.
While
acknowledging that each broadcaster has had different experiences,
they spoke with one voice about a common concern the "grave
and rising threats to the right to gather information and communicate
it across national borders."
Radio
Netherlands Worldwide DG Jan Hoek said, "Our most important
objective is to inform people without access to diverse media
sources and viewpoints, who lack reliable and independent information.
"In
a progressively polarised environment where the media in many
countries are encountering fierce curbs on their freedom to publish,
we need to stand together to meet the needs of those millions
of audiences worldwide who have come to depend on us as a vital
source of trustworthy information."
According
to several press monitoring organisations, press freedom has been
on the decline in many countries in recent years. The Paris-based
Reporters Without Borders has tracked an increase in the number
of journalists killed at work each year since 2002.
The
five international broadcasters reach hundreds of millions weekly
by radio, television and the Internet. Programmes are produced
in 60 languages and broadcast worldwide through thousands of affiliate
radio stations, television channels and cable systems.
The
joint statement reads, "In recent years, international broadcasters
have seen grave and rising threats to the right to gather information
and communicate it across national borders.
"A
growing number of countries in Eurasia, Africa, South and
East Asia, and Latin America have restricted or blocked
coverage of events of significant public interest. Journalists
including many working for our organisations have
been detained, arrested, expelled, kidnapped or killed.
"Particularly
disturbing are new efforts by some governments, through the licensing
and regulatory process, to restrict or forbid local rebroadcasts
of our programmes on radio and television through local partnerships.
And more states are deliberately interfering with broadcast signals
or are attempting to block or censor the internet.
"As
international broadcasters, we deplore such efforts and
call upon governments to end any and all practices that hamper
the right of people everywhere to 'receive and impart information
and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.'"
[United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights]
"Each
of us has a different history, a different mission, different
resources and different experiences, but we all share a common
goal to present accurate and comprehensive news and information
to audiences around the world. Accordingly,
we oppose efforts to restrict this important work, and call upon
governments worldwide to halt such practices."
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