HIMANSHU SHEKHAR
Child reporting is often treated as a non serious job but the fact is quite different. Infact Journalists face significant challenges during reporting on children. This is a daunting task that needs time, skills and ethical considerations.
Media faces challenges such as attacks from Governments, commercial pressures...children's rights are violated as the media capitalises on their emotional impact and powerful images to boost the sale of their products.
Children's stories tend to be negative and dramatic and their voices are seldom heard as there is a very limited representation of children in the news.
However, any journalist reporting on children must have a better understanding of child rights. It can’t be justified that in some part of world media is revealing the identity (pictures and names) of children victims of sexual abuse, HIV and AIDS, domestic violence and other crimes.
In South Africa there is a proper Children's Act for media guidance. A journalist could land in jail for 20 years if found guilty of contravening the act.
Good reporting of children's issues gives a great deal of insight into the world they live in and telling a child's story well is a way for readers and audiences to examine themselves.
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Monday, January 28, 2008
JOURNALISM IS NOT A BED OF ROSE
HIMANSHU SHEKHAR
Journalism was never a bed of rose. Journalist are facing so many challenges day by day. This world turned democratic but journalism become more toughest. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) says that the last three years have been incredibly dangerous ones for journalists and its report on media deaths Deadly Stories 2007 highlights the range of risks that they face all over the world.
This year’s report again shows the tragic attacks on reporters, photographers, translators, delivery truck drivers and all other media workers remain at record levels and that there is a trend of high risk for media in many areas in the world. The Report reinforces our resolve to fight for justice in these cases and to ensure that journalists can work without fear for their safety. For the third year in succession, the IFJ reports an extremely high number of deaths of journalists and people who work with them. Many killings were targeted attacks, some were crossfire casualties in war zones, and others were deaths in accidents.
The IFJ has total of 172 is again dominated by the body count of Iraqi journalists in a war that has now accounted for more than 250 media killings according to the IFJ’s affiliate the Iraqi Syndicate of Journalists. Conflict areas like Somalia, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka also had high numbers of casualties as well. In all of these countries, and it the rest of the world, local reports are the ones most vulnerable to violence. In Iraq all but one of the media workers killed was Iraqi. The conflicts in Asia made it the most dangerous region after the Middle East.
In non-conflict areas, especially in Latin American, journalists were killed for covering drug-trafficking and political corruption. In Africa, those reporting on political unrest were targeted. Europe stands out as the safest region in the world but the death of a Russian journalists, the most dangerous European country for media, and well-known Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, show that safety problems still exist.
The IFJ counts the number of media deaths from information provided by regional offices, member unions and other reliable media sources. It’s need of time to join hands for the safety of media persons and for the liberty of press. All leading media houses of world should take this issue and try their best to get rid of this problem.
Journalism was never a bed of rose. Journalist are facing so many challenges day by day. This world turned democratic but journalism become more toughest. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) says that the last three years have been incredibly dangerous ones for journalists and its report on media deaths Deadly Stories 2007 highlights the range of risks that they face all over the world.
This year’s report again shows the tragic attacks on reporters, photographers, translators, delivery truck drivers and all other media workers remain at record levels and that there is a trend of high risk for media in many areas in the world. The Report reinforces our resolve to fight for justice in these cases and to ensure that journalists can work without fear for their safety. For the third year in succession, the IFJ reports an extremely high number of deaths of journalists and people who work with them. Many killings were targeted attacks, some were crossfire casualties in war zones, and others were deaths in accidents.
The IFJ has total of 172 is again dominated by the body count of Iraqi journalists in a war that has now accounted for more than 250 media killings according to the IFJ’s affiliate the Iraqi Syndicate of Journalists. Conflict areas like Somalia, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka also had high numbers of casualties as well. In all of these countries, and it the rest of the world, local reports are the ones most vulnerable to violence. In Iraq all but one of the media workers killed was Iraqi. The conflicts in Asia made it the most dangerous region after the Middle East.
In non-conflict areas, especially in Latin American, journalists were killed for covering drug-trafficking and political corruption. In Africa, those reporting on political unrest were targeted. Europe stands out as the safest region in the world but the death of a Russian journalists, the most dangerous European country for media, and well-known Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, show that safety problems still exist.
The IFJ counts the number of media deaths from information provided by regional offices, member unions and other reliable media sources. It’s need of time to join hands for the safety of media persons and for the liberty of press. All leading media houses of world should take this issue and try their best to get rid of this problem.
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