'Denigrated and discredited': how American journalists became targets during protests
Aphotographer who says she was blinded in one eye. A
TV reporter surrounded and arrested by police live on air. A cameraman slammed
in the chest with a riot shield while filming a peaceful protest outside the
president’s home.
These brutal crackdowns on the media did not take
place in a developing world dictatorship. They were in the United States of
America, a nation admired around the world for its constitutional right to
freedom of speech – but where Donald Trump has spent four years constantly
denigrating the media.
During more than a week of demonstrations triggered
by the death of George Floyd, an African American man killed by a white
Minneapolis police officer who pressed a knee on his neck for nearly nine
minutes, journalists covering the story have become targets for both police and
protesters in cities across the country, waving their press badges in vain.
The US Press Freedom Tracker, organized by a
coalition of press freedom groups, has counted more than 300 incidents since
the unrest began: “49+ arrests, 192 assaults (160 by police), 42
equipment/newsroom damage. Assault category breakdown: 69 physical attacks (43
by cops), 43 tear gassings, 24 pepper sprayings, 77 rubber
bullets/projectiles.”
Many campaigners find the situation impossible to
divorce from Trump’s sustained contempt for the media. He has railed against
“fake news” and described the press as “the enemy of the people”.
Suzanne Nossel, chief executive of PEN America, a
leading human rights and free expression organisation, said: “You can’t but see
the linkage when somebody with such a powerful platform has been relentlessly
attacking individual journalists and media outlets and discrediting their
reporting so persistently, and then you see members of law enforcement who are
actually willing to be caught on film and on camera arresting and attacking
members of the media who are doing their job.”
Attacks on journalists by protesters, or people who
attach themselves to protests, has also been another striking feature of the
demonstrations, which have generally been peaceful by day but in some instances
marred by violence at night. A crew from Fox News was surrounded by
demonstrators outside the White House and jeered at and pelted with objects
until they fled. In Atlanta, a crowd stormed the headquarters of CNN.
Nossel added: “Your goal in terms of mounting a
forceful demonstration is to capture attention and headlines and television
coverage and the media is crucial to that, so for protesters to turn on
journalists evinces a real confusion about what it is that keeps our democracy
and mechanisms of accountability working.
“The press makes mistakes and misjudgments and
that’s a fact, but to think of a working journalist as somehow your enemy,
somebody deserving of attack, does reflect this campaign of denigration and
discrediting.”
But law enforcement has been by far the main
culprit.
In Minneapolis alone, Linda Tirado, a freelance
photojournalist and activist who has contributed to the Guardian, said she was
now blind in her left eye after being shot at by police; the CNN correspondent
Omar Jiminez, who is black, was arrested on live television and released a
short time later; Ali Velshi, a host on the MSNBC network, said he was shot in
the leg by police firing rubber bullets after his crew identified themselves as
journalists.
In Washington, Amelia Brace and Tim Myers were
reporting for Australia’s 7News channel outside the White House when they,
along with peaceful protesters, were charged by park police and the national
guard so Trump could stage a photo op outside a historic church.
With its first amendment guarantee of free speech,
America has typically been relied on by journalists, writers and dissidents
around the world who face persecution from authoritarian governments.
Washington has condemned media repression in Egypt, Turkey and elsewhere. But
that moral credibility has been put at risk by a steady deterioration during
the Trump era.
In 2018, the US for the first time joined the ranks
of the most dangerous countries for journalists to operate, according to the
advocacy group Reporters Without Borders. Last week the International Crisis
Group, usually preoccupied by global hot spots, warned that racial division
risks further “division and instability”.
Speaking from Zimbabwe, Tendai Biti, a human rights
lawyer, said he has a 13-year-old son growing up in Maryland. “I’m thinking
whether I made the right decision to allow him to go to school in the United
States of America because he’s black and it’s obvious there are huge structural
issues around race, around inequality, around exclusion which America must deal
with,” he said.
“But what’s also shocking is the disproportionate
response of the state, if you like, the Africanisation of American politics,
the language of exclusion and the language of hate and, of course, what we’ve
seen, the exuberant and excessive force used by the authorities.”
Biti, a former political prisoner who served as
finance minister in a power-sharing agreement with then president Robert
Mugabe, added: “For us, who have been fighting autocracies and dictatorship on
the African continent, the events in America are giving licence and legitimacy
to the authoritarianism and dictatorship and violence that we have seen as
democrats for decades.
“Every little tinpot on the African continent is
smiling and is studying America’s new copybook plucked from the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, from Zimbabwe, from the Central African Republic, from
Djibouti.”
The implications for journalists in Africa and
elsewhere are profound, Biti added. “Whenever truth becomes a casualty then
journalists will suffer. They are mediums of communication, whether it’s
newspapers, whether it’s websites, whether it’s social media. In Africa, once,
the medium of communication becomes a target, then the messengers become
targets and you’ve got a problem.”
Far from toning down his rhetoric, Trump has
continued his assault in remarks and tweets. At the end of May he wrote, “The
Lamestream Media is doing everything within their power to foment hatred and
anarchy,” and called journalists “truly bad people with a sick agenda”. He has
not offered any hint that he accepts responsibility for helping create a
hostile environment.
Bill Galston, a former policy adviser to President
Bill Clinton, said:
“I do a lot of reading every day about how the rest
of the world is reacting to this and, as an American, it makes me really want
to cry. We are the object of scorn from our enemies and pity from our friends.
We’ve come to this? At least your country [the UK] has had some decades to get
accustomed to the idea of national decline. We’re new to it.”




