Journalists
in sentence
1139 examples of Journalists in a sentence
The US government also needs to find its voice and criticize a Russian regime that arrests its opponents and reportedly murders
journalists.
At the moment, administration insiders are trying to convince elite
journalists
that Bush did not deceive outsiders about Saddam Hussein's nuclear weapons program.
To that end, Chinese leaders bring Latin American political figures, academics, journalists, high-ranking government officials, ex-diplomats, and others to China to participate in weeks-long trainings, academic events, or ad hoc exchange programs, and meet their Chinese counterparts.
The journalists, academics, politicians, and other influential people whom China is courting have a responsibility to avoid being swept up in the charm offensive, and to provide a clear-eyed assessment of the potential pitfalls of engagement.
Journalists
used to lead the way, rather than slavishly following the flow of superficial Internet traffic.
The story of an erratic kid from Brooklyn taking on the Soviet empire in its national sport made good copy for journalists, who understood the significance of the event.
Xi has asked
journalists
to pledge “absolute loyalty” to the CCP, and closely follow its leadership in “thought, politics, and action.”
Bankers are still social pariahs, as lowly valued by the public as drug dealers or
journalists.
LONDON – Arrests of
journalists
in Spain and Ukraine on the basis of Interpol notices have raised serious questions about the methods of the international police agency.
Countries opposed to a free press are increasingly using Interpol’s “wanted person” alerts to target and silence
journalists
who have fled.
Similar efforts to use Interpol to restrict the travel of unfriendly
journalists
have been reported elsewhere.
While it is lamentable that countries like Turkey, China, and Egypt persecute
journalists
at home, we must not allow Interpol to become complicit in such behavior.
And yet countries continue to use Interpol as a means of silencing journalists, and the agency’s leaders aren’t managing to stop them.
Every year, more
journalists
are murdered because of their reporting than die in war zones.
Since 1992, when the Committee to Protect
Journalists
(CPJ) began compiling data, 1,324
journalists
have been killed on the job, and 849 of them were executed for their work.
When law enforcement and the judiciary are in thrall to organized crime,
journalists
know that no one will protect them when they dig up stories threatening the interests of criminals or corrupt officials.
In fact, most Mexican
journalists
can instinctively identify “zones of silence” where democracy and transparency perish.
My organization supports this effort with our yearly Global Impunity Index, which shows that democracies like Mexico, Brazil, India, Pakistan, and the Philippines consistently fail to convict journalists’ killers.
Journalists
know that democracy and a free press are mutually dependent, and that when reporters are silenced, embezzlement, extortion, and environmental crimes increase.
With the exception of several individuals implicated in the 2004 murder of Forbes editor Paul Klebnikov in Moscow, Magnitsky-type laws have not been widely deployed in the defense of
journalists.
In Mexico, for example, CPJ worked with reporters and advocacy groups to lobby the national government to treat attacks on
journalists
as federal offenses – and to bypass state-level law enforcement agencies when corruption is suspected.
As governments dither,
journalists
are defending themselves the best way they know how: with journalism.
Journalists
tend to focus too heavily on leaders’ personalities, because it makes good copy.
In any given week, French, European, (and increasingly Indian) journalists, bloggers, tweeters, and others regularly express all sorts of things that are offensive or provocative to Muslims – or at least the most devout and fanatical among them.
But, in the wake of the attack on Charlie Hebdo, it is worth noting that, apart from war-torn Iraq and Syria, more
journalists
are killed each year in the largely Catholic Philippines than in any Muslim-majority country.
Approximately 1,000 Japanese forces serve in and around Iraq.Intellectuals, journalists, and politicians are now saying and writing things about Japan’s role in the world that were unthinkable a decade ago.
Members of parliament, among the world’s highest paid, unabashedly pad expenses and take expensive junkets, while neutering government investigative agencies and prohibiting
journalists
from casting lawmakers in a bad light.
The data also need to be easy to manipulate so that third parties - whether commercial data services or
journalists
– can create compelling and revealing visualizations.
I seem to have been one of the few
journalists
who from the outset didn’t think that Donald Trump’s entry into the presidential race was funny.
Read More from "Zone Defense"Revanchist ChinaSYDNEY – In a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC, on February 22, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe informed the audience of officials, experts, and
journalists
that Japan is “back” and will not stand down in its ongoing sovereignty dispute with China over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands.
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