FOREWORD
JOURNALISM IN THE FACE OF
ENVIRONMENTAL CRISES

T

HE focus of this year’s World Press
Freedom Day commemorations — the
importance of journalism and freedom
of expression in the context of the
current global environment crisis —
is apt, as it comes when the Southern African
region is experiencing the effects of a climate
shock.

Furthermore, access to reliable information
helps separate fact from fiction, with journalists
being a key conduit of information between
scientists and government officials, on one
hand, and citizens, on the other.
The United Nations (UN) recognises that
access to information is a key building block to
creating democratic societies and strengthening
democracy in the face of growing misinformation
and disinformation.

In 2023 and 2024, the region was hit by
effects of the El Niño phenomenon, which is
characterised by warm weather and reduced
rainfall, leading to widespread food insecurity.

For this reason, UN Sustainable Development
Goal (SDG) 16.10 specifically addresses
public access to information and protecting
fundamental freedoms.

As of April 2024, at least three Southern African
countries — Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe —
had declared the 2023-2024 agricultural season
a state of disaster.

As the world in general, and Southern Africa
in particular, continues to face the current
environmental crisis, authorities must view
journalists as friends rather than enemies.

The three countries are seeking billions of
dollars to stave off hunger.
In such a situation, access to information and
awareness are vital components in mitigating
the effects of the drought.

The media is a building block for democracy
and progress and, most importantly, a channel
for enhanced access to information rather than
a medium that needs to be censored.

This assists an informed citizenry to make
informed decisions about their lives regarding
the environmental crisis.

In the year ahead, we need to expend our
energies fighting for the rights of all journalists,
particularly environmental journalists, to
lessen the effects of climate change. Access
to information is imperative in combating any
disaster.

Inadequate access to information creates a
vacuum often filled with quackery, conspiracy
theories, misinformation, and disinformation,
which only aggravates the effects of the
environmental crisis — in this case, the El Niño
phenomenon.

We should focus on training and building the
capacity of journalists to report more effectively
on climate and environmental issues to protect
the planet and inform the public for a better
understanding of these issues.

This was the case during the COVID-19
pandemic, which is still fresh in many people’s
minds.

Various
international
organisations,
governments, non-governmental organisations,
and advocacy groups are using public interest
information to redouble their efforts for a more
sustainable future in line with the Sustainable
Development Goals of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development.

Authorities
did
not
provide
adequate
information, and journalists were not allowed to
perform their duties freely, resulting in a spike
in misinformation that impacted efforts to curb
the spread of the disease.
One of the lessons and experiences drawn
from the COVID-19 pandemic is that journalists
are allies in mitigating the effects of disasters
such as those caused by climate change.
STATE OF PRESS FREEDOM IN SOUTHERN AFRICA 2023

As we commemorate this year’s World Press
Freedom Day, we must be conscious of the
persistent and emerging threats to media
freedom.

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