Statement by the Director-General of UNESCO, on the occasion of World Press Freedom Day 2022.
The digital era has also put media workers and their sources at greater risk of being targeted, harassed and attacked – for instance, due to data retention, spyware and digital surveillance. Expressions of hatred against journalists have spiralled, affecting women journalists in particular. Our research shows that more than seven out of ten women reporters surveyed have experienced online violence. And as few of these technologies are regulated transparently and with accountability, perpetrators of violence operate with impunity, often without leaving a trace. This must end. Technological advances need to be underpinned by respect for the freedom, privacy and safety of journalists. Social media networks must especially do more to tackle rampant disinformation and hate speech, while protecting freedom of expression.UNESCO is firmly committed to these goals. To rise to emerging challenges, UNESCO supported the adoption of a new Windhoek Declaration for Information as a Public Good in the digital age, thirty years after the first, at last year’s World Press Freedom Conference in Namibia.
Since then, UNESCO has been implementing the Declaration by promoting new transparency principles for online platforms, undertaking research into sustainable media business models and putting a new focus on media and information literacy in education systems. But we all must do more to address the risks and seize the opportunities of the digital age. On this World Press Freedom Day, I invite Member States, technology companies, the media community, as well as the rest of civil society to come together to develop a new digital configuration – one that protects both journalism and journalists.
Since then, UNESCO has been implementing the Declaration by promoting new transparency principles for online platforms, undertaking research into sustainable media business models and putting a new focus on media and information literacy in education systems. But we all must do more to address the risks and seize the opportunities of the digital age. On this World Press Freedom Day, I invite Member States, technology companies, the media community, as well as the rest of civil society to come together to develop a new digital configuration – one that protects both journalism and journalists.
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