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Ecological journalism is increasingly hazardous occupation, UN chief says

Journalists covering ecological problems have actually ended up being increasingly targeted with violence as the world faces an extraordinary ecological emergency, U.N. SecretaryGeneral Antonio Guterres said on Friday.

A report by UNESCO, the United Nations' clinical and cultural company, released the day before showed an boost in violence against ecological press reporters around the world by both state and personal stars.

Press flexibility is under siege, and environmental journalism is a progressively dangerous profession, Guterres said by video message at a World Press Freedom Day occasion in Santiago, Chile.

Guterres stated lots of journalists have died in current years covering subjects such as unlawful mining, logging and poaching.

Of the 44 reporters who were murdered in 15 countries while reporting on environmental issues from 2009 to 2023, just 5 cases resulted in convictions, according to the UNESCO report.

On the other hand, more than 70% of the 905 reporters the company surveyed in 129 countries said they had been assaulted, threatened or pushed, and that the violence against them had gotten worse.

Chilean President Gabriel Boric said that in Latin America, the circumstance was particularly pushing, with two converging problems: the protection of environmental protectors and the right to exercise liberty of expression.

Boric, mentioning other figures for the deaths of both ecological activists and reporters in Latin America, stated the chilling figures ought to call for action, while UNESCO head Audrey Azulay highlighted the case of reporter Dom Phillips and indigenous expert Bruno Pereira, who were killed in the Brazilian Amazon in 2022.

Both Guterres and Boric also condemned the deaths of reporters killed in Gaza as Israel's attacks on the Palestinian area continue.