STATE OF PRESS FREEDOM IN SOUTHERN AFRICA 2022

the effects of harassment for women journalists.
The most recent, a global study under UNESCOICFJ(4), looks into 16 countries and reveals that
there has been “sharp increase in online violence
against women journalists and reveals how
these attacks are now inextricably bound up with
disinformation, intersectional discrimination,
and populist politics”.
The revelations based on experiences of
various women journalists point to how online
harassment is growing and has become a
ubiquitous problem faced by women journalists
around the world.
It demonstrates the psychological distress and
impact of threats and other acts of intimidation
on women journalists’ work.
The hard facts from this study, “The Chilling:
Global trends in online violence against women
journalists” were summarised as follows:
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Online attacks have real-life impacts.
Not only do they affect mental health and
productivity, but physical attacks and legal
harassment are increasingly seeded online.

This indicates that many women journalists,
who are frequently structurally disempowered
and disadvantaged in newsrooms only escalate
the more extreme instances of online violence
with their employers.
The reluctance to report and escalate when
attacks occur can be linked to systemic failings
such as unsympathetic, misogynistic, patriarchal
or otherwise hostile workplace cultures, poor
leadership, fear stemming from a lack of clear
and established reporting procedures, and/
or a lack of a formal protocol to deal with the
problem.
These findings echo those of similar research
done on sexual harassment in the media by
WAN-IFRA Women in News in 2020-2021(5).
The research covered 20 countries in subSaharan Africa, the Arab region, Southeast
Asia, Central America and Russia.
In Africa, study respondents came from eight
countries — 40% of them reported having faced
physical or verbal sexual harassment.

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Misogyny intersects with other forms of
discrimination. Women journalists, who are also
disadvantaged by racism, homophobia, religious
bigotry and other forms of discrimination face
additional exposure to online attacks, with
worse impacts.

Yet, 73% of those affected did not report
these attacks. The reasons for remaining silent
included a fear of facing negative consequences,
a lack of reporting mechanisms, fear of being
labelled negatively and the fear of being out of
a job.

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Gendered online violence intersects
with
disinformation.
While
orchestrated
disinformation campaigns weaponise misogyny
to chill critical reporting, reporting on
disinformation can be a trigger for heightened
attacks.

A lot of the examples in the UNESCO-ICFJ
study reveal examples of women being attacked
for not only being journalists, but also being
women: calling their credibility into question,
compromising their personal safety and having
facts about their work ethic questioned.

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Online attacks against women journalists
have political motives. Political actors, extremist
networks and partisan media are identified as
instigators and amplifiers of online violence
against women journalists.

This shows how abuse of online platforms to
further agendas (political or otherwise) brings in
the complications associated with making social
media companies accountable for the actions
that occur on their platforms.

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Social media platforms and news
organisations are still struggling to respond
effectively. In the context of an increasingly toxic
information ecosystem, platforms are seen as
major enablers for online violence. When women
journalists turn to them or their employers in
the midst of an online violence storm, they often
fail to receive effective responses and even face
victim-blaming behaviour.

While various countries have protection
mechanisms in place to provide a relatively
quick and easy way for harm to be reduced,
including by getting harmful posts or messages
taken down or disabled, while at the same time
giving people appropriate room for freedom
of expression; it is clear that addressing the
challenge of online harassment is bigger and
requires concerted efforts from various players.

Although 73% of women respondents in the
UNESCO-ICFJ global survey underpinning this
study said they had experienced online violence
in the course of their work, only a quarter (25%;
n=179) had reported this to their employers.

In Zimbabwe, Faith Zaba, editor of the
Zimbabwe
Independent,
endured
online
attacks(6) after being appointed as editor for that
publication in 2019.

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