Two Asian women won Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Press Freedom Awards on Thursday for their bravery in holding governments to account in the face of persistent threats.
Indian
freelance reporter Swati Chaturvedi and Filipina social media campaigner Inday
Espina-Varona were honoured at the RSF annual awards, being staged in London
for the first time.
Maltese
journalist Matthew Caruana Galizia, who has carried on the work of his mother
Daphne, murdered for exposing corruption on the Mediterranean island, was also
honoured at the ceremony at the Getty Images Gallery.
Established
in 1985 to defend and promote press freedom, Paris-based RSF has been
presenting its yearly awards since 1992.
Previous
winners include the late Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, imprisoned Saudi blogger
Raif Badawi and the Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet.
Chaturvedi
won the Prize for Courage, awarded for journalism in a hostile environment.
She has
faced online harassment campaigns after exposing what she calls a "troll
army" operating for the governing Bharatiya Janata Party of Prime Minister
Narendra Modi.
"I get
a dozen death threats every day and around 15 to 20 rape threats," she
told AFP.
"The
whole idea of a democracy is that you are allowed to have a dissenting view.
"Unfortunately,
the way politics has panned out across the world, journalists are really under
threat.
"It is
sad that you are called courageous just for doing your job."
Sexist
attacks
Veteran
journalist Espina-Varona founded a social media women's rights campaign in
response to Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's comments on women.
"After
a particularly hard-hitting column, I find 50 to 80 private messages calling me
a liar, an ugly woman, and mostly these are sexist attacks," she told AFP.
"The
slurs don't really bother me but the threats that say 'we know where you live,
we'll see if you are as brave as you think' -- that bothers me because it also
happens to other journalists."
She won the
Prize for Independence, awarded to reporters for resisting pressure in carrying
out their work.
"Independence
is very important for citizen journalism. I teach young people to be critical
minded and I hope this award will inspire them," she said.
Some 63
journalists, 11 citizen journalists and four media assistants have been killed
so far in 2018, RSF said, including Washington Post contributor Jamal
Khashoggi, who was murdered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
A total of
55 journalists were killed in the whole of 2017.
Caruana
Galizia won the Prize for Impact, awarded for work that has led to an increase
in awareness of journalistic freedom.
His mother,
Malta's pioneering anti-corruption blogger, was assassinated in a car bomb
attack in October 2017.
'Fight
for the right thing'
"It's
a recognition that what we're fighting for is right," he said of the
award.
"It's
about continuing to fight for the right thing: justice for my mother and for
her stories. Everything else will follow.
"Hope
is a word for people who have already given up."
He said
Malta could and should become a functional European Union democracy that did
not have to rely on investigative journalism as the last remaining line of
defence.
However,
"its toxicity will spread" throughout the EU if partners including
Britain and France did not join the fight.
Daphne
Caruana Galizia's murder remains unresolved.
Ninety
percent of violent crimes against journalists go unpunished, said RSF.
Afghanistan
is currently the world's deadliest country for journalists, with 14 killed this
year.
"The
alarming number of deaths is a reminder of the urgent need to provide
journalists with more protection," said RSF secretary-general Christophe
Deloire.
Some 168
journalists, 150 citizen journalists and 19 media assistants are in jail, the
organisation said.
RSF's 2018
World Press Freedom Index ranks the worst five countries for journalists as
China, Syria, Turkmenistan, Eritrea and North Korea, which came last at 180th.

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