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UN Official: Trump’s Attacks on Media Done to Intimidate, Silence


United Nations Special Rapporteur David Kaye speaks to the media about the right to freedom of opinion and expression in Turkey, in Ankara, Turkey, Nov. 18, 2016. US President Donald Trump's attacks on the media risk damage to a core value, Kaye wrote Friday in an online forum.
United Nations Special Rapporteur David Kaye speaks to the media about the right to freedom of opinion and expression in Turkey, in Ankara, Turkey, Nov. 18, 2016. US President Donald Trump's attacks on the media risk damage to a core value, Kaye wrote Friday in an online forum.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s attacks on the media are part of a global trend of hostility to freedom of speech and damage the U.S. public interest, a U.N. human rights expert said Friday.

David Kaye, the U.N. special rapporteur on the freedom of expression, said Trump’s attacks, such as a Feb. 17 tweet listing news outlets that he considered “the enemy of the American People,” were not without purpose.

“They have concrete aims: to intimidate reporters into certain kinds of coverage, or clarify for his favored outlets what coverage he desires, or plant the seeds of doubt about news stories (such as the Russia investigation led by Robert Mueller).”

The president’s broadsides also serve to silence criticism of his policies and to undermine the public’s right to know what the government was doing with their tax dollars, he said.

“The primary victim of Trump’s campaign against independent news is the American public. He may see it as valuable politically, but it’s wrong, and it risks doing long-term damage to a core value,” Kaye wrote in an article published on the Just Security online forum.

“When we tie together the jeremiads and rhetoric with what the Trump administration is doing in other governing spaces, the practice of attacking the press becomes clearer as policy than solely reckless rant,” he wrote.

Kaye’s analysis of Trump’s attacks on the media comes two days after U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein raised the question of whether Trump’s remarks amounted to an incitement to attack journalists.

FILE - President Donald Trump speaks to the media in the lobby of Trump Tower, Aug. 15, 2017, in New York. With Trump are from left, National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao and OMB Director Mick Mulvaney.
FILE - President Donald Trump speaks to the media in the lobby of Trump Tower, Aug. 15, 2017, in New York. With Trump are from left, National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao and OMB Director Mick Mulvaney.

“President Trump’s statements are indeed reckless, but they are consistent with a troubling trend of hostility toward open and honest government,” Kaye wrote. “And sadly, from the global perspective, it’s part of a general trend of hostility to freedom of expression, online and off.”

Freedom of the press existed, Kaye said, because the public had a right to information. He referred to an Aug. 4 press conference where Attorney General Jeff Sessions demanded that the “culture of leaking must stop.”

Sessions’ intent was not only to deter sources and whistleblowers but “to deprive the public of stories of the highest public interest” about the administration, Kaye said.

He said Trump was a “regular purveyor” of fake news, defined as “intentionally fraudulent information given to the public,” and his administration operated as if it had something to hide.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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