Categories: NewsWorld News

UNESCO Describes Killing Of Bulgarian Reporter As An ‘Attack On Press Freedom’

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) through its  Director-General, Audrey Azoulay, has condemned the “brutal” killing of investigative reporter Victoria Marinova stating that the attacks on journalists erode fundamental human rights to freedom of expression and press.

Recall OSUN DEFENDER reported that Marinova’s body was found on Saturday in the Bulgarian city of Ruse, bearing signs of suffocation and rape.

Azoulay said: “Attacks on journalists erode the fundamental human right to freedom of expression and its corollaries, press freedom and free access to information.

“Moreover, the use of sexual and physical abuse to silence a woman journalist, is an outrage against the dignity and basic human rights of every woman”.

Marinova, 30, presented a current affairs programme called “Detector”, broadcast by the local, privately-owned television network, TVN. According to news reports, it is not yet clear whether her death was directly related to her journalistic work, but national authorities are reportedly carrying out a murder investigation.

She is the third investigative journalist to be killed in the European Union in the past 12 months, UNESCO regretted.

Recall that Daphne Caruana Galizia was killed in a car bombing in October 2017 in Malta and Jan Kuciak was murdered in Slovakia in February 2018.

The UNESCO chief urged the authorities to “conduct a thorough investigation into this crime and bring its perpetrators to justice”.

Azoulay said, “this is essential to defend freedom of expression and freedom of information in Bulgaria and, not least important, to ensure women’s safety, dignity and freedom”.

In 2017, UNESCO recorded a total of seven journalists killed in Europe, four of whom were women, representing the highest number of female reporters killed in single year, since 2006.

The agency said the percentage of women media professionals killed worldwide, rose from four per cent in 2012 to 14 per cent in 2017.

UNESCO is mandated with monitoring and advocating for the protection of a free press worldwide, including through a UN Plan of Action to protect journalists and end impunity.

Recent Posts

Top 10 Trending Stories In Nigeria Today

Nigeria is a country where the news cycle never slows down, with fresh developments unfolding…

3 hours ago

LG Polls: Court Restrains KANSIEC From Conducting Election

Justice Simon Amobeda, a Federal High Court sitting in Kano, on Tuesday, restrained the Kano…

3 hours ago

Senate Investigates Drug Allegations Against Senator Ashiru

Nigeria's Senate has constituted a six-member ad hoc committee headed by Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe to…

5 hours ago

Players Injured As Kano Pillars U-19 Team Bus Crashes

Many players of the Kano Pillars FC U-19 team sustained injuries in a road accident…

5 hours ago

Nigeria-Libya Row: Appropriate Action Will Be Taken – CAF

The Confederation of African Football (CAF), on Tuesday, said it has commenced a proper investigation…

5 hours ago

Only Two Tiers Of Govt Exist In A True Federation – Aregbesola

Former Osun State Governor and immediate past Minister of Interior, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, has called…

5 hours ago

This website uses cookies.