Speaking to journalists at the UN Office at Geneva ahead of a screening of his new documentary State Of Silence, Mr. Luna insisted that the issue of their safety was everyoneās responsibility.
āI think it’s time for us to come out, us citizens, to come out and protect journalism around the world and protect these voices that are crucial for us to experience freedom, to experience democracy and to live in a healthy world,ā he said.
āThere is no access to truth if there is no free journalism.ā
According to UNESCO, the UN Scientific, Educational and Cultural Organization that is mandated with keeping track of and promoting journalistsā safety worldwide, in 2022 and 2023, a journalist was killed every four days.
Efforts to encourage governments to do more to protect journalists are also spearheaded by the UN human rights office, OHCHR, which leads the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists.
Journalists under attack
A staggering eight in 10 murders of journalists are not investigated around the world, said OHCHR Human Rights Officer Renaud de Villaine, who highlighted a āpersistenceā of the killing of journalists today. Ā
āIt happens in in conflict situations, like in the Middle East, but also in Ukraine,ā he said.
But it can also happen in countries not at war such as Mexico, where journalists investigating corruption, drugs, cartels and gangs like those who feature in the documentary āare specifically targetedā.
Since 2017, there have been 69 recorded murders and 32 documented cases of disappearances of journalists in Mexico, Mr. de Villaine noted, before insisting that the issue belied deeper systemic issues which OHCHR was working hard with the authorities to resolve.
āJournalists are not the only ones targetedā¦the problem is beyond journalism,ā he maintained, noting the recent gruesome murder of city mayor Alejandro Arcos in Guerrero state.
Echoing those concerns, Santiago Maza, Director of State Of Silence, explained simply that āviolence pays offā against journalists.
The theme runs through the documentary which tells the stories of courageous investigative reporters from Mexico who have endured violence and threats on their lives which have forced them into hiding, in the pursuit of their work into subjects including illegal logging and the exploitation of vulnerable communities whose rivers have been diverted.
Opportunity for change
āThe current situation wonāt change by itself,ā Mr. Maza insisted.
āThe fact that thereās a new president doesnāt mean that thereās going to be an improvement in the situation, but it does provide an opportunity to address this properly and to change the hierarchy of what needs to be addressed by the Government.ā
The dangers journalists face today include an increasing trend in many countries to criminalize their activities by using the apparatus of government.
āThe judicial system in many countries is used and I would say also weaponized by State actors sometimes, but also by non-state actors to target journalists and media outlets,ā said Mr. de Villaine.
āIt explains this criminalization of journalists, it explains why there is still a high rate of journalists being detained around the world – more than 300,ā he said, citing the NGO Committee to Protect Journalists.
When you silence a journalist, youāre not just silencing one voice, youāre silencing the voice of thousands of communities
ā Thibaut Bruttin, Reporters Without Borders
Not just statistics
According to the Reporters Without Borders, Mexico ranks 121st in its World Press Freedom Index and 165th in terms of safety.
A staggering 155 journalists have been killed there since 2000 because of organized crime āthat is able to target and hit journalistsā¦systemic corruption, plus also the failure of some institutionsā, said Thibaut Bruttin, the NGOās Director General.
āJournalists are not numbers, they are actual people,ā he told journalists in Geneva.
āItās not one more journalist being killed, itās another story thatās gone, itās another life thatās disruptedā¦Also, journalists donāt die, theyāre killed. Somebody is behind that.ā
Explaining his reasons for wanting to get involved in the project as its executive producer, Mr. Luna said that over and above the āscandalā of the high number of journalists killed in Mexico, the wider negative impact on society needed to be addressed.
āItās what that violence generates,ā he said. āItās the amount of young people that today are questioning if pursuing the dream of being a journalist or not, itās the number of people who are scared of giving an interview today.ā
He added: āWhen you silence a journalist, youāre not just silencing one voice, youāre silencing the voice of thousands of communities that needed that journalist to connect with the outside.ā