New York, November 25, 2009—The Committee to Protect Journalists honored four
journalists with its 2009 International Press Freedom Awards in a ceremony
Tuesday night that highlighted impunity in journalist murders, this week’s killings
of Philippine journalists, and the Internet’s emerging role in press freedom. Anthony Lewis, a two-time Pulitzer Prize
winner and founding CPJ board member, was honored with the Burton Benjamin
Memorial Award for lifetime achievement.
About 800 people attended
the benefit dinner, which raised more than $1.3 million. Robert Thomson, managing editor of The Wall Street Journal, was chairman. Christiane Amanpour, CNN’s chief
international correspondent and a member of the CPJ board, hosted the ceremony at
the Waldorf-Astoria.

Among the
awardees was Naziha Réjiba,
editor of the independent online news journal Kalima. She has been the
target of continual government intimidation and harassment: Her home is under
constant surveillance, her phones are monitored, and she has been summoned for
repeated police interrogations. “I am neither a hero nor a victim,” she told
the crowd, “but a journalist who wishes to work under normal conditions. The
degree of repression in
Mustafa
Haji Abdinur,

Amanpour opened the evening highlighting
impunity in the cases of murdered journalists. “Since 1992, when CPJ
began tracking, more than 500 journalists have been murdered in direct
retaliation for their work. Of those, more than 88 percent go unsolved. That’s
a powerful silencer of the press,” Amanpour said. “CPJ is fighting to beat back
the culture of impunity where murderers go unpunished, witnesses fear reprisal,
and journalists are sent a clear message that certain topics are too dangerous
to be discussed.” She described the killings
of numerous journalists in the Philippine
Amanpour also took a
moment to pay tribute to Walter
Cronkite, famed CBS news anchor and CPJ’s honorary co-chairman, who died earlier
in the year. “CPJ is grateful to have had Walter Cronkite at its side as a
champion for press freedom. We will miss him dearly,” she said.
Paul Steiger, CPJ's board chairman, noted journalism’s
transition online and the challenges it presents to press freedom. "We
need to defend the medium through which information is disseminated: That means
the Internet," Steiger said. “We must challenge governments, defend
journalists of all kinds, and create a united front with Internet and media
companies to challenge online censorship and surveillance.”
Two awardees could not
attend because of their ongoing imprisonments. Eynulla
Fatullayev is serving a term of more than eight years in
CPJ did much the same in
2001, when it honored imprisoned Chinese journalist Jiang
Weiping and petitioned for his release. Jiang, now free, was finally
able to accept his award on Tuesday. “Allow me to express my belated, but
sincere thanks to all of you for your strong support of press freedom
worldwide,” Jiang told the crowd. “Today, I have my freedom, but there are 26
of my colleagues in
Lewis,
two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize
and one of the foremost thinkers on freedom of speech and the First Amendment,
received the Burton Benjamin Memorial Award for lifetime achievement. “Tonight we celebrate a person who has never hid or been
silent,” Lee Bollinger, president
of
Other presenters included
Jacob Weisberg, editor-in-chief of Slate
Group, and Bill Keller,
executive editor of The New York Times.

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