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Inter-American Press Association Criticises Guyana Government On State Advertising

GEORGETOWN, Guyana, January 3, 2020 (CMC) – The Inter-American Press Association (IAPA), citing the need to preserve press freedom, has called on the Guyana government to review its current practice of the distribution of official advertising, to ensure “neither Stabroek News or any other media house is adversely affected”, the Stabroek newspaper reported, today.

The newspaper said that the IAPA statement follows a complaint, which it lodged with the US-based organisation on December 23, last year, citing the sharp reduction of state advertisements from the Department of Public Information (DPI) since August 2019, as constituting an assault by the Guyana government on press freedom.

“In its statement, IAPA, a longstanding press advocacy group representing media organisations in South America, the Caribbean and North America, said that it has expressed concern to the Guyana government regarding the complaint by Stabroek News that it had been targeted for its journalistic content.

“IAPA said that in a communication sent to the Prime Minister, Moses Nagamootoo, and the Director of the Department of Public Information, Imran Khan, it asked the government to review its current practice of distribution of official advertising,” the newspaper reported.

It said that the letter was signed by the president of the IAPA, Christopher Barnes, of the Jamaican newspaper, The Gleaner, and the president of the Committee on Freedom of the Press and Information, Roberto Rock, of the Mexican portal, La Silla Rota.

“On behalf of the Inter American Press Association (IAPA), we wish to express our concern regarding the complaint of the Stabroek News of Guyana, one of our members, pertaining to discrimination in the distribution of official advertising in reprisal for its journalistic content.

“This practice, as outlined, is incompatible with the Declaration of Chapultepec, signed in 2002 by President Bharrat Jagdeo, and represents a grotesque act of discrimination against the press, to which IAPA always pays special attention. This form of censorship affects not only a publishing house and its journalists; it affects the society as a whole which is deprived of relevant information on the performance of government and elected officials.

“IAPA holds further that the application of discriminatory policies in the granting of official advertising can be construed as acts of corruption, whereby public resources, provided by citizens, are used for the private interests of administrators, becoming a form of embezzlement of public funds. State advertising should be delivered with full transparency and technical criteria, equity and through efficient management of public resources.

“The Declaration of Chapultepec states that ‘the media and journalists should neither be discriminated against nor favored because of what they write or say’, and that ‘the granting or withdrawal of government advertising may not be used to reward or punish the media or individual journalists.’ These concepts also included in the Declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

“It is against this background that IAPA calls on the Guyanese Government, in the interest of preserving freedom of expression in the country, to review its current practice of distribution of official advertising so as to ensure that neither Stabroek News or any other media house is adversely affected,” the letter noted,.

Stabroek News Editor-in-Chief, Anand Persaud, said he welcomed the IAPA intervention, saying it is a “reflection of the importance of regional solidarity in the defence of press freedom”, Stabroek newspaper reported.

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