Transcripts For ALJAZ 20240709

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reduce our methane by 30 percent by 2030. and i think we could probably go beyond that. we just announced this package of the general assembly and back in september at the time was mentioned 9 country shad signed on to day. it's over use approach in a 100 countries that are sign on. i so fair that was behind tuesdays attack on afghanistan, biggest military hospital and cobble at least 19 people were killed, had another 50 injured and the explosion among those killed was the commander of the taliban special forces. it was in charge of cobbled security. the french ambassador to australia has accused cambra of intentional deceit when it cancelled a multi $1000000000.00 submarine deal. australia signed up to a security packed with the u. s, and the u. k. instead. under that deal it will get its 1st nuclear power submarines . i minister scott morrison has denied lying about his intentions. sedans, main opposition leader says the deposed prime minister could return to form a new government. many minority has held meetings with abdullah ham dock who remains under house arrest. tens of thousands of people have been demonstrated against the military's takeover. they called for civil disobedience on monday after a crackdown on rallies. the international community also urged general abdel father alber hand to restore the civilian dead government. the u. s. has given a final approval to pfizer covered 19 vaccine for children from ages 5 to 11. president joe biden has called the move a turning point in the fight against virus. the food and drug administration has already said the shot is safe for that group. h. a smaller dose was a smaller than normal, was recommended. that the headlines one you see on al jazeera right after inside story cso by in affluence astray. some neighborhoods racked by social and economic to spend one hour and a half make the band of local heroes every one of us and what a responsibility to change our christian fighting for their suburban drake. pon out 0, journalists around the world are frequently detained, kidnapped, and even killed for simply reporting the news. in the past 30 years, 1400 have died. a most of those responsible for that deaths have gone free. so how can this be changed? well, a collective of advocacy groups has come together in the hague to raise awareness, but will it be enough? the term is around. this is inside story. ah, hello, welcome to the program. i'm adrian finnegan. 3 press freedom group. so leading the fight to bring justice to journalists killed for simply doing their job. they've lost what they call the people's tribunal on the murder of journalists in the hague, to name and shame, offenders. it doesn't have a power to punish any one or 2 sentence perpetrators, but it does have the ability to raise public awareness and collect evidence to support investigations into abuses. it's legitimacy comes from the involvement of some of the world's top legal experts. journalists, survivors directly affected by the crimes, including relatives and colleagues of murdered journalists, will be given a platform to make their case. the people's tribunal on the murder of journalists will span a 6 month time frame. it will involve 5 hearings. the final one will be in may next year. the panel consists of 9 judges, and the lead prosecutor is a renowned human rights lawyer. al medina, butterball and indictment contains charges against the governments of sri lanka, syria, and mexico, along with survivors of abuse. leaders in the fight for press freedom would also give their testimony or some of those include this year's nobel peace prize. laurie maria theresa, she will speak about the threads that she's faced as a journalist in the philippines. so lots to discuss with our guests. but 1st a report from al jazeera step boston, who's been at that tribunal in the hague. the people spy bulow for the murder on journalists is held here in a church in the hague. and this is a story close to a heart because many journalists, noah colleague, a friend who was killed on murder for doing their chop. in my case, this is dutch journalist sandra. tony was murdered in 1909 and east timor and investigators found that the perpetrators belonged to the indonesian military. but nobody was ever brought to trial is just one example. and it said that 8 out of 10 cases are never being brought to justice. so the organizers of the tribunal say killing a churn, and this is basically the safest crime. so to fight this appeal, impunity, they have organized this tribunal. it has no legal power. there will be no arrest warrants, but there will be a charge will be prosecuted. there will be witnesses and this is very important for the cases, the so called cold cases for witnesses to be able to testify. and course in this, in this room here, for the stories to be heard. so 3 cases are being focused on here during describe, you know, it's the murder of santa become a, my tone gotten 3 long can journalists who was murdered in 2009. we have not been shot by g. it's a syrian jonas who was killed in military detention in 2015 and me greg on the low pass. he was murdered with his wife and his son in mexico. and mexico is seen as one of the most dangerous countries for journalists. increasingly, journalists are being under attack in recent years. more crimes have been committed and it's not only in warfare actuation, but more and more investigative journalists are being murdered for. we've really corruption cases for doing anything that people empower, might not like. and that's one of the reasons organize this. impunity is continuing because very often people, one part of the state, part of the government, part of the army who are responsible in total, more than $1400.00 murder journalists, many of them cold cases are the tests are recorded by the organ, the organ nicest of the tribunal, the tribunal will last around 6 months and the will be some kind of verdict at the end of it. step 5 and for insight story from the hake. ah, so let's bring in our guests for today's discussion from the hague, rejoined by leon wilkins, who's director of free press unlimited, and found of a safer world for the truth project that set behind the tribunal from the letter in motor korean valor is the sister of daphne kajuana galicia, a member of the daphne kawana glazier foundation, and from oxford in the u. k. julie percetti, who is a global director of research at the international center for journalists, welcome to inside story, all of you. and let's start with you. what is the point of this tribunal when it doesn't have the power to punish any one will hold to account and he perpetrator? i think that the people started b o l is good afternoon by the way. the, the people's tribunal is an attempt to seek justice. more than 1400 journalists have been killed since 992. that means that 1400 stories have been killed. it means that 1400 relatives and family members have left me left with a spot of emptiness in their soul. and we need to seek justice. and the reason that we are doing this at the grassroots attempt at people's tribunal is basically because states are not living, update our responsibility to protect journalists and to investigate julie. what happens when a journalist is murdered? so it's really promoting a better standard for seeking justice, giving recommendations for a better investigations and highlighting and documentation. some of the graphic cases of injustice that happened in the, in the past years. that is the objective and we believe it will have an impact. you think so you think that the, the states will feel pressured by this shamed into doing something about it? well, i think that one of the things we're hoping for is that the international years addiction is improved at a moment. we see that many of the cases of a journalist are prosecuted as the case of a normal matter, whereas it is our conviction. and actually the evidence that we are presenting to the people's tribunal judges is showing that in most cases, more than $900.00 of the $414.00 on the cases, janice would actually killed for the stories that they were writing. this is neglected in most you visual processes, so it has as much to improve and we believe that the recommendations will help. of course, in the case of the syrian, our republic, one of the cases that we're bringing to highlight to the tribunal. we don't expect them to change their behavior. but the international jurisprudence, the quality, the best practices of prosecuting better investigations. that is what we can promote and we can actually show that it's possible to investigate these cases. that is what the save world for the truth is all about all about cream given what happened to your sister. why do you think this tribunal is so important? it's because the good afternoon, by the way, it is important for lots of your reasons as lay on williams, as i already explained, it raises awareness. it forces people to think it might not get face to do what they should be doing, but it is certainly focusing attention where it should be lay on, spoke about the number total number of genesis has been killed. when you look at it in detail, it's even more frightening every week. a john, this the scale of every single week of the think of how many stories are lost, think of how many people are less than distress. think of how much is being come above. the important thing about the tribunal is that it's focusing responsibility . what should be? states should be protecting journalists. they should not be protecting the people who kill them. as the situation in malta changed since stephanie's murder. could what happened to daphne happen again, they're nothing has been done to change the systems that fail her. so the situation now is possibly even more precarious on it was before daphne was killed because up to the murder, we knew that it was a possibility. now we know definitely that it can julie just to play devil's advocate for a moment, should journalists working in areas where international law and local legislation, if it even exists, is not implemented? should they understand that there's is a risky profession, that if you're going to expose corruption, wrongdoing organized crime incompetence, you're going to upset people, you're going to make enemies. in fact, it's your job to speak truth to power and inevitably, that results in making enemies, particularly if it's the case of investigative reporting into corruption in the organized crime, into environmental crimes. naturally, there is risk attached to this, and that's why i think shotting a lot on the motor of journalists with impunity and the general culture of impunity when it comes to attacks on journalists in an event like the one that is being staged in the hague, is important because a large part of the battle is actually getting citizens around the world to recognize that when you kill or mute a journalist through attacks, you are killing stories and you are killing the public's right to know who is abusing power, who is stealing from the public purse, who is inflicting hom on others. and it's important for people to understand as, as liam began, that this is a freedom of expression crosses. it's not just about individuals being murdered or threatened, or harmed online or offline. it's actually about attempts to prevent us as citizens, knowing what we need to know to be able to make choices, whether it's about who to elect or how to protect ourselves from a pandemic jury where the deadliest places in the world to be a journalist right now why, latin america, mexico, so dangerous, and while latin america is certainly a focus, mexico and dade places like the philippines, which remains one of the deadliest places on a practice journalist at the practice. journalism, syria, indeed, the countries that are in focus in this tribunal hearing it's a combination of corrupt, corrupt power, if and in the age of this information. it's also a case of undermining public trust in journalism, in journal of from you take somebody like daphne in a place like malta, which we did not necessarily think was one of the places on us that it could be so dangerous to be a journalist. and we see in this era, as the world really does to back towards fascism, we see that threats to journalists and not just happening in conflicts like syria, like us gonna done. they're happening in western europe. they're happening in countries that we previously considered to be safe to practice journalism. and the reason that's occurring is because there's been an enabling environment created by the rise of populism, by weaponized social media platforms and the general threats. journalists, whose job is to ensure that we have access to treat as become that much more difficult in the demonize ation, than the criminalization of journalism has called an escalation of these threats. so it's no longer just about conflict and it's no longer just about understanding the threat being elsewhere in the context of despotic states or countries that have been set by organized crime. it's increasingly a case of emboldened political leaders and corporations and corporate actors. feeling safe to attack douglas and that we have to change your re, some extremely interesting points. i will come back to you, judy, to talk more about that in just a few moments. but the 1st at leon, tell us more about the 3 cases in particular that this tribunal, i don't know it's, it's, it's very broad. it's not just going to take in these 3 cases, but it is focusing on 3 cases. in particular, tell us more about those. oh, today we are hearing graphic evidence from a number of celebrity cases. but for us, the objective was also to look at places far away that normally don't have the public eye. so one of the cases where bringing to the judges is the case of santa rica, my tuner, a journalist who was heading media outlet in sri lanka. and it was during the civil war that he was one of the critics of the government policy that was leading to the killing of innocent citizens. and because of that social media campaign and threats were made by government officials, and one of them graphically is the brother of the current president of sri lanka. so we have dis selected this case because there's really no chance that there will be a real trial happening and longer today. that is why we bring it to this international forum. similarly, in the case of now below chabarise, you, one of the founders of i know body sons of the, of the village, a very important syrian media outlet, independent media outlet was killed in custody in syria, in 2015 after 2 years of back and forth in prison, he was tortured one of the important aspects of the international covenant for civil and political rights. the human rights charter that we know is that people should be protected from torture. in this case, clearly it has been torture. moreover, the syrian authorities have failed to respond to any kind of accusation that was made against him. so clearly and not a case where you cannot expect local justice to happen. the last case that we are investigating is miguel law school. he was a journalist and vera cruise, mexico and uncovering drug related crime in which in mexico, one of problems is especially in barracuda. one of the most deadliest provinces of mexico miguel was investigating crimes of drugs, a mafia which was connected to the let's say the, the upper world. so people indicted or not indicted, but people that he blamed for being complicit in the criminal acts of the drugs mafia were connected to the local government and high officials. so again, although we believe that there may be an object for bringing it to the federal prosecutorial level, we do not expect that in mexico, this case will be further processed, right? so apart from that, so these are the 3 cases where it's clear that the level of impunity we cannot expect to have more local action on this in fact, and save a world for the truth. we've also investigated 10 other cases in which there is a possibility for local action. for example, we investigated the death of zine, which i hate in pakistan. and we found in our investigation new evidence which has allowed the family and lawyers to reopen the case in time. so what we're trying to do is use every avenue to create justice because in the end of the day, all these people deserve that day in court. they deserve to be heard something that is not happening today. cream, where are you on the road to justice for daphne. one man has been has been sentenced to prison. at least here. we have had a case brought to court after pleading guilty of involvement. but what's, what's happening now, but 7 people have admitted to that the ladder all being processed because you know, its own charges and stuff. you said one person being the president because he pled guilty to others, resisting child by looking spokesman. when a fed pass is being accused of commissioning, bethany's law has been indicted to me and 2 other people have been arranged, say all feeding innocence, as well, say, are used on supplying the weapons earlier this year, public inquire into the needs and circumstances of daphne florida. close the recommendations, but 3 months later i was still waiting to see any action taken towards, you know, addressing the baron clearly problem. when in stage institutions were face was found to be held responsible for duffy's mother, even though it was found to be guilty of commissioning a letter. but those failures the famous letter that the mother have not seen redress were still looking towards what is the, what is the state saying when, when, when that is raised with them, what, why is it taking so long? i would imagine taking a guess. yeah, i would imagine that the large of principal is being subordinated to political expediency. any political decisions that has to be taken to, to fix things that rotate for so long on this is certainly going to upset a lot of people seem to be inconvenient. i would imagine about the problem, but the urgency remains, you know, international engineers, literally only case. there was a mission here on the full time. in fact, the 1st year of the mission met with the head of police, met with the head of government met with john this and then they recognize the situation. what it is that remains problematic. julie coming back to what you were saying of a few moments ago, we live in an era of dis, information, and fake news. to what extent are online platforms aiding and abetting violence against journalists moment? it's a very significant function that they are playing and facts to facilitate or to be victors for violence against journalists. the most stock example i can give you to illustrate this point is not. it was only a couple of weeks ago that facebook decided that it was not ok to threaten to murder a journalist on the platform, which is extraordinary. up until that point to reflect what they was saying earlier about the motor of journalists with impunity being a special case. the justification facebook gave failing to act in such cases was that journalist draw attention to them. so they're public figures and therefore they should expect to be abused. well, online violence, which is particularly violence against women journalists. well, you see a blend of networked massage in a and viral this information and, and other forms of have speech such as racism, intersecting on a platform like facebook or any number of other digital platforms. you see that that creates an enabling environment. it aids and the bits, crimes against journalists, because it creates almost as a sort of tides of abuse which can be triggered by political actors. but it's been fueled by political actors. but it also is amplified via algorithmic abuse, if you like, in such a way that it can embolden those who ho, threats and whoa sexist abuse against women like definite car want to see was herself brucely trolls and threatened with murder and sexual violence before her death. to these a real threat. yeah. they're also part of the impunity. so what, what needs to happen to stamp it out? well, i mean, the 1st thing is i think where there are laws against hate speech that can be used against women journalists only if massage money is recognized as a hate crime or a form of hate speech. so that's really important. secondly, was when it comes to the platforms, as we've recommended my cell from colleagues researching online violence for unesco and the national center for journalists. looking at cases such as maria records, for example, the nobel peace prize winner. we have recommended that the owner needs to be shifted from the women being attacked to the platforms, facilitating the abuse and the perpetrators. and so that needs to be much more stringent action taken. perhaps this should be enacted in reference to one of our other findings which is but from a survey of women journalists 20 percent had experienced offline attacks and abuse and harassment that they linked to online violence episodes. so there's a direct correlation between online attacks and offline attacks, and that is extremely disturbing in an environment such as the one where, inhabiting leon, when so many have literally got away with murder for so long. why should anything change now, particularly when so many governments around the world still see journalists as a problem? i think that we have to realize as a general public, but also as journalist working together. that the reason why journalist are more and more talkative is because our institutions are weakening. we see a decline of the independence of the initial apparent s around the world. presidents politicians are taking charge of the issue we system. so we need to stand up towards that. we believe that the fact that journalist are targeted more and more and more is partly because their last resort for investigating crimes that are happening. journalists perform an extremely important public function because they uncover with their stories the wrong doing that is happening in all of our societies left, right, and center. and a because journalist is not about policing, but asking questions that are critical. that is a role that journalist have traditionally, and we need that institution to be protected by the institutions that are guaranteeing us independence. so for me, the question is not about whether or not journalists should ask these questions. the questions is, why do we allow as a public, as a general public, we allow ourselves to be. and dolphin is the spheres where a journalist are criticized, et cetera, rather than supported. so we believe that solidarity is extremely important. we had free press and limited receive more than 600 requests for journalist in danger. last year. that was a duplication of the number the year before this year. we have a guy just on burma, nicaragua, we cannot just go on to protect and present. we have to get to prosecution, we have to strengthen our independent judiciary that i'm afraid we're going to have to leave it. but many thanks indeed to all of you. leon williams are korean vela and julie persetti of being with us today. thank you for watching. don't forget, you can see the program again at any time just by going to the website of al jazeera dot com for further discussion. join us that our facebook page on facebook dot com forward slash ha inside story. and you can join the conversation on twitter handle at ha, inside story from me, adrian finnegan on the whole team here in doha. thanks for being with us. we'll see you again. bye. for now a pro democracy activists risking their lives fighting autocracy on me. i know that i might go to prison, but i will join the run. a new episode of democracy may be exposed. the struggle of those who believe democracy is worth dying for. we never know when an opening is going to come, when are fruit vendor is going to emulate themselves and say enough is enough. my life for democracy on how does era november announcer 05 years off to the historic key field between fog rebels and the colombian government algebra examines white tensions and violence of rising once again. emma award winning full flies investigates the untold stories across the us. millions encompassed on boat in parliamentary elections under a new constitution and more than a year after, the last poll triggered a political crisis in mercy and personal short documentary africa. direct show cases, african stories from african filmmakers. china marks $100.00 days until it holds the winter olympics. but how will the pandemic include for a boycott? impact the sporting event november on out jo, sierra it's the world's most populous democracy. diverse dynamic and undergoing momentous, seen context. india dixon in depth. look at the people and politics of india. exploring how the coven 19 pandemic struck the nation. it's continuing impact and the lessons learned for the future. join me fade as those are for context india and alex is eda. hello the stories that we cover a highly complex so it's very important that we make them as understandable as we can. as al jazeera correspondence, guys, what we strive to do with . ready if you, if he is, government declares a state of emergency is rebels from to guy. say they've taken 2 towns on the road to the capitol. ah, i'm can vanelle, this is angie, they're alive from dover. also coming up after agreeing to counts and methane emissions, while data is discussed, how they'll finance the plans needed to slow down climate change. i so says it carried out an attack which killed 19 people and wounded 50 others campbells largest military hospital.

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