Journalists
in sentence
1139 examples of Journalists in a sentence
When bullied,
journalists
can protect themselves only by fighting back – as a group.
He now regularly denounces
journalists
as “enemies of the people,” and tells his followers to stop “fake news” from standing in his – and, by implication, their – way.
This is a good reason for leaving historical debates to writers, journalists, filmmakers, and historians.
The murder of Anna Politkovskaya, one of Russia’s bravest and best journalists, a woman who dared to expose the brutal murders committed by Russian troops in Chechnya, is final proof that President Putin has delivered nothing more than a run of the mill dictatorship with the usual contempt for law.
Putin’s Russia has already lost 12 leading
journalists
to murder in the past six years.
On the other, the president watches in silence while his ex-colleagues in Russia's FSB security service (the former KGB) provide no security to those murdered, and launch a series of notorious espionage cases against journalists, scientists, and environmental activists.
This was a war with no witnesses, as the government barred independent
journalists
and observers from the war zone.
When the UK joins the Trump administration in putting trade and investment before human rights and good governance, it is journalists, opposition politicians, and human-rights activists around the world who bear the costs.
In 2010, not long after the right-wing populist Fidesz party came to power, government officials fired a number of MTVA
journalists
who had been critical of Fidesz during the election campaign.
But the incessant, extended media coverage of the investigation suggests that the MPD has provided – and possibly even leaked – information from the investigation to journalists, a routine but legally dubious means of gaining public support.
Foreign
journalists
declared it the biggest legitimacy crisis in the 25-year history of the Islamic Republic, but Iranians seemed surprised by the commotion.
The lack of a defined enemy makes reporting on and understanding the conflict difficult for journalists, diplomats, and government officials.
And clownish right-wing radio talk-show hosts now have more influence on many conservative American voters than the sober
journalists
of the mainstream media do.
They regularly needed to resolve the delicate issue of whether to invite to their embassy celebrations various Charter 77 signatories, human rights activists, critics of the communist regime, displaced politicians, or even banned writers, scholars, and
journalists
– people with whom the diplomats were generally friends.
Nowadays, however, the risks to political stability as a result of government corruption are considerable, given the prying digital eyes of citizen
journalists.
But over three days that month, the Cuban government arrested Rivero and 27 other independent
journalists.
The
journalists
were part of a spring sweep that turned 75 Cubans-including librarians, writers, and other professionals-into political prisoners.
For Rivero and
journalists
who smuggled their missives abroad, it was their insistence on writing what they saw and felt that put them in jail.
In one 1998 column, he wrote about
journalists
jailed for operating independently and lamented an internal press "totally devoid of meaning."
Nixon used these methods against political opponents, journalists, and government employees suspected of disloyalty to the president.
Now that his electronic surveillance program has been exposed, Bush’s Justice Department has launched an investigation into how the news became public, threatening the
journalists
who reported the information.
In its suit, Al Jazeera alleges that its offices were closed, its transmissions and broadcasts were jammed, its license canceled, its local branch liquidated in a compulsory procedure, and its
journalists
subjected to harassment, arrest, and detention for political reasons.
That is why the press as a whole, and
journalists
in particular, are so frequently targeted by the authorities.
When media outlets aren’t owned – and tamed – by the authorities or people close to them, they still face censorship, intimidation, tax audits, and occasionally assassination of their
journalists
and editors.
Social elites, liberal intellectuals, and critical
journalists
are the enemy of those who crave power but feel looked down upon by people who appear to be more sophisticated.
They ran sensational show trials targeting military officers, journalists, NGOs, professors, and Kurdish politicians.
Voters do not need detailed knowledge and preferences on every policy question; broad orientations and the capacity to take cues from trusted authorities – politicians, journalists, or, God forbid, experts – can be enough.
The questions asked of politicians by
journalists
are often so aggressive or implicitly insulting that one wonders why their recipients don’t walk out of interviews in a huff, or wither on the spot from humiliation.
But those means ended up leading to the almost total suppression of any freedom of expression in Tunisia: a censored press, imprisonment of journalists, political trials, and arbitrary arrests within all circles of society, not merely those with ties to the Islamic movement.
While
journalists
in South Korea used this survey to demand reforms to improve English instruction in their country’s schools, the same survey hardly received any coverage in Japan.
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