01 Mar 2019 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Mathanavasan Paramanantham, the Editor of Tamil Mirror and Ground Views Editor Raisa Wickrematunge were awarded the British Government’s Chevening South Asia Journalism Fellowship scheme-2019.
They will be leaving for the UK in March to undertake a programme at the University of Westminster in London.
Titled ‘Good Governance in a Changing World: the Media, Politics and Society’, the programme will bring together experienced journalists from around South Asia. The programme explores the important role the media has in holding governments, public services, other organisations and individuals to account, and the different ways in which journalists can do this.
The Fellowship has been opened to participants from Sri Lanka since 2017, and this is the third group travelling to the UK.
Speaking at a reception organised to celebrate their success, the British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka James Dauris said, “Good journalism helps to safeguard all of the freedoms that we cherish; it protects public interests; it helps to keep democracies democratic, and elections free and fair; it is a vital bulwark against corruption and organised crime”.
“The most recent Freedom House index shows democracy in retreat in more countries around the world than it has been advancing. A growing number of governments are increasingly using restrictive laws to stifle freedom of expression and prevent the functioning of an independent media. For commercial, criminal, political and many other reasons people seek to prevent journalists looking into those dark corners where we need light to shine. The pages of Sri Lanka’s recent history carry stories of terrible violence against writers, cartoonists, editors, crimes for which the people responsible have still not been held to account.”
“The growing digital space is an increasingly important tool for journalists to research and build their stories, and to reach more people than ever before. Journalism informed and driven by data has produced some of the most important stories of recent years. One of our Journalism Fellows this year runs a media platform that is exclusively online, while the other is an editor of a Daily Newspaper that has its foundations in the online space.
“The UK believes that protections for journalists – formal or informal, bloggers for example – need to extend to those operating in the digital space. A threat against a journalist made online is no less serious than one made in person or through the post.
“We need good, honest investigative journalists. Every society needs them, those where they aren’t allowed to operate almost certainly most of all. It comes as no surprise that there’s a direct correlation between countries with the greatest media freedom and the lowest levels of corruption.
“We are proud that the UK has long supported media freedoms globally, and is home to a wealth of media expertise and innovation. We are committed to this cause at home, and through partnerships with our friends across the world. For example, our Magna Carta Fund for Human Rights and Democracy supports crucial frontline work training journalists, including personal and online safety skills. All this will remain a priority for us.” the High Commissioner said.
- The growing digital space is an increasingly important tool for journalists to research and build their stories, and to reach more people than ever before
- We are proud that the UK has long supported media freedoms globally, and is home to a wealth of media expertise and innovation
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