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Climate and Environment

70% of environment journalists report attacks, threats, pressure — UN

Agence France-Presse
70% of environment journalists report attacks, threats, pressure � UN
A photo shows the UNESCO logo during a speech by its director-general to announce the United States' request to return to the institution, at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, on June 12, 2023. The United States plans to rejoin UNESCO from July this year, ending a lengthy dispute that saw Washington end its membership in 2018, the UN cultural agency announced on June 12.
AFP/Alain Jocard

SANTIAGO, Chile — Seventy percent of environmental journalists from 129 countries, polled in March, reported experiencing "attacks, threats or pressure" related to their job, UNESCO said Thursday.

Of those, two in five subsequently experienced physical violence, it said in a report released on World Press Freedom Day.

The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization warned of an increase in violence against, and intimidation of, journalists reporting on the environment and climate.

"Without reliable scientific information about the ongoing environmental crisis, we can never hope to overcome it," UNESCO director general Audrey Azoulay said in a statement.

"And yet the journalists we rely on to investigate this subject and ensure information is accessible face unacceptably high risks all over the world, and climate-related disinformation is running rampant on social media."

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ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALISM

UNESCO

UNITED NATIONS

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