Blog Post
Dec 2, 2022

Press Freedom: A Right, Yet Democratic Luxury

To write freely and openly is a luxury. Around the world, in authoritarian regimes, the luxury of writing тАФ to report on what you see, hear, and think тАФ is virtually nonexistent. The thirst for truth and knowledge, and to write on it, is there. But dictatorships wonтАЩt allow such a luxury.

Journalists act as the eyes and ears of the people. When their work is heavily censored or manipulated, people remain uninformed or, worse, disinformed. The freedom of the press is a clear and crucial indicator of democracy and fundamental human rights. Yet, like democracy and human rights, press freedom is deteriorating worldwide.

Censorship is a common tactic in the authoritariansтАЩ toolkit. Dictatorial regimes will go to great lengths to control the public narrative тАФ they will intimidate, harass, or even kill journalists to ensure certain information is shared and some is not.

Few authoritarian regimes know censorship strategies better than the PeopleтАЩs Republic of China. Reporters Without Borders (RSF), in their 2022 Press Freedom Index, ranked China 175 of 180 countries. The restrictive media environment is nearly as bad as it could be. The countryтАЩs fierce propaganda apparatus тАФ led by the Propaganda Department of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) тАФ maintains control of all major Chinese outlets and heavily censors and intimidates the international mediaтАЩs China bureaus.

Under the CCPтАЩs тАЬProvisions on the Governance of the Online Information Content Ecosystem,тАЭ any and all content that тАЬdisrupts economic or social order,тАЭ тАЬundermines ethnic unity,тАЭ or тАЬthreatens national securityтАЭ is deemed illegal. Put simply, the CCP does away with harmful тАЬrumors.тАЭ Among other tools and strategies, the regime has used an ever-growing firewallimprisoned journalists, and set restrictive press accreditation requirements to ensure rumors stay at bay.

Despite the CCPтАЩs desperate efforts, citizens of China are hungry for knowledge тАФ they long for the luxury of true, unfiltered information. The rumblings of revolution are churning. In the last few weeks, cities across China have erupted in protest over shared discontent with the regimeтАЩs COVID-19 policies. Unsurprisingly, security forces have detained and beaten the journalists covering these protests but not entirely silenced them. With the demonstrations making headlines left and right, ChinaтАЩs firewall suddenly doesnтАЩt seem so tall.

In recent years, the repression faced in China and the allure of press freedom have led many journalists to seek refuge in the nearby independent island country of Taiwan. Taiwan, which went through a hard-fought transition from authoritarianism to democracy in the late 20th century, has come to represent a beacon of freedom and human rights. Either through expulsion or personal choice, international journalists formerly based in Beijing or Hong Kong, who could no longer report as they wished, have found Taiwan to be a safe haven. The presence of international media is growing, as seen in the growth of community groups such as the Taiwan Foreign Correspondent Club.

Last month, the Human Rights Foundation (HRF) returned to TaiwanтАЩs capital, Taipei, to host the third Oslo Freedom Forum in Taiwan. Journalists, local and international, showed up en masse to celebrate and support democracy, human rights, freedom, and the activists who risk their lives to protect those things.

Democracy is, without a doubt, the best тАЬantidoteтАЭ for ChinaтАЩs malicious efforts to influence global media. To champion democracy is to champion press freedom. We at HRF encourage you to advocate for the global right to write. Support the Oslo Freedom Forum in Taiwan and press organizations like the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and Reporters Without Borders (RSF); share the CPJтАЩs digital safety kit and RSFтАЩs safety tips with journalists at risk or threatened by authoritarian regimes; call for the release of imprisoned reporters; and share the stories of journalists like Jamal Khashoggi who have died in their efforts to expose the ugly truth of authoritarianism.

How can we help?

Hit enter to search or ESC to close

Join the cause by subscribing to our newsletter.

Email Us