HomeOthersClassifiedCanada Media Demand Action Over Online Abuse

Canada Media Demand Action Over Online Abuse

ā€œI’m done,ā€ exasperated Canadian journalist Rachel Gilmore said in an online post imploring authorities to tackle a dramatic rise of hate, including death and rape threats, against her and her peers.

The online abuse of journalists, which has become a global phenomenon, has reached a fever pitch in Canada, where dozens of media groups have joined forces with reporters to demand authorities take the matter seriously.

The ā€œfree press is under attack,ā€ said Gilmore, a reporter with Global News, adding: ā€œWe won’t be silenced. But we need you to stand up for us.ā€

From catcalls interrupting live broadcasts to obscenity-laced online threats, journalists say they are facing an onslaught.

Some are afraid to leave their homes and have been forced to take extraordinary security precautions.

ā€œIt’s relentless,ā€ said Erica Ifill, a columnist at The Hill Times in Ottawa. ā€œIt ranges from death threats to rape threats to letting us know they’re surveilling us.ā€

ā€œI’m thinking maybe I should leave journalism,ā€ she said.

– ā€˜A chilling effect’-
The Canadian Association of Journalists (CAJ) has backed Gilmore’s call for action.

Earlier this month, 52 newspapers, broadcasters and media organizations published an open letter warning of a ā€œchilling effectā€ and urging political leaders to denounce ā€œany attempts to undermineā€ the media.

ā€œOnline harassment is a scourge on our democracy and it needs to stop,ā€ the CAJ said, noting that such ā€œvile abuseā€ is most often directed toward journalists who are women, LGBT, or people of color.

Gilmore and others have been called ā€œtrash whoresā€ or worse on social media. One message said they ā€œneed to be boogaloo’ed the fuck out of Canada,ā€ using a term linked to a far-right movement in the United States.

ā€œI’ll kill you bitch better watch your back when your (sic) in public,ā€ said another.

The daily Toronto Star’s Saba Eitizaz said it had gotten so bad — she is named in dozens of antagonistic messages per day — that she had to take a medical leave from work.

ā€œThis is definitely far worse and far more insidious than a general sort of public disenchantment with the media,ā€ she told AFP.

– ā€˜Play dirty with journalists’ –
Eitizaz said the spike in abuse started in late 2021 when a far-right Canadian politician urged his supporters to ā€œplay dirty with journalists.ā€ Then it gained momentum during a weeks-long trucker-led protest that clogged the capital and blocked trade routes in February.

ā€œNow I’m constantly dreading what I might find in my in-box,ā€ she said.

Originally from Pakistan, Eitizaz said she fled to Canada after being targeted by a ā€œsimilar malicious digital campaignā€ over her human rights reporting.

ā€œI came to this country for safety, and so I feel cognitive dissonance facing death threats in Canada,ā€ she said.

– ā€˜Heinous and unacceptable’-
The fourth estate has long been derided by those in power, such as Richard Nixon, who in secret White House tapes vilified the press as ā€œthe enemy.ā€

However, the situation has worsened with the rise of social media and more virulent attacks on the press by leaders such as former US president Donald Trump, whose taunts of ā€œfake newsā€ were taken up across the globe.

Ifill and others blame several factors for the rise in hate: political polarization, economic insecurity, and a pandemic that forced people into isolation, ā€œsitting at home in front of their computers, scared and angry.ā€

Canadian Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino tweeted: ā€œThe abuse that Rachel and other journalists have received — in particular women and people of color — is heinous and unacceptable.ā€

According to his office, Mendicino has raised the issue with chiefs of police across Canada.

Several journalists who spoke to AFP lamented an apparent police reluctance to charge perpetrators.

ā€œThey don’t see these people as a threat,ā€ Ifill explained.

Ottawa police Constable Mike Cudrasov would not say if any investigations arose from journalists’ complaints, but added that ā€œallegations of threats are taken seriously.ā€

Ottawa is also to unveil an ā€œonline safety actā€ in 2023 that some hope will curb bad behaviors. Officials told AFP the act will leave it to platforms to moderate content.

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