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55 Journalists have died from Coronavirus in 23 countries in the past 2 months

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A press freedom organization has declared that 55 reporters have died worldwide from the novel Coronavirus in the past two months.
The Press Emblem Project (PEC), made this known in a statement ahead of World Press Flexibility Day on Sunday.

The organization lamented that media workers often lack appropriate protection for covering the coronavirus pandemic and warned that a lot of them were putting their lives in danger.

Since March 1, 2020 the PEC said it had recorded the deaths of 55 journalists throughout 23 nations from the virus, however confessed that it was uncertain if all of them had actually ended up being contaminated on the job.

“Journalists are at great risk in this health crisis because they must continue to inform, by going to hospitals, interviewing doctors, nurses, political leaders, specialists, scientists, patients,” PEC said in a statement.

It said that in a range of countries “indispensable protective measures” like physical distancing, quarantines, and mask-wearing had not been applied.


Ecuador was the hardest hit country, with at least nine journalists who had succumbed to the virus, followed by the United States, with eight, Brazil with four, and Britain and Spain with three each, it said.

The organization also echoed warnings from the United Nations that the pandemic, which had killed more than 230,000 people out of more than 3.2 million infected worldwide is being used in some countries as an excuse to crackdown on the media.

“Censorship, internet shutdowns, arbitrary detentions of journalists, physical and verbal attacks, and emergency laws that restrict press freedom have occurred in recent weeks,” the PEC said.

It added that this was particularly worrying at a time when access to reliable public information was more vital than ever. “Transparency is paramount and can be lifesaving in a health crisis,” it said

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