BFF-41 Journalists covering US protests find themselves under attack

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Journalists covering US protests find themselves under attack

NEW YORK, May 31, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Journalists covering nationwide
protests over the death of a black man at police hands in Minneapolis
have found themselves under attack, by police and at times by
protesters.

The arrest and handcuffing Friday of a black CNN journalist by
police in Minneapolis — even as he was reporting live on camera
following the death of George Floyd — may have drawn the widest
coverage.

The journalist, Omar Jimenez, was released an hour later after the
Minnesota governor personally intervened.

But there have been several other serious incidents across the
country, notably in Louisville, Kentucky, where a riot-squad policeman
fired what appeared to be pepper-spray pellets at a local TV crew
filming the scene.

“I’m getting shot!” Kaitlin Rust, a reporter with local TV channel
WAVE-3, cried out on camera.

And in Minneapolis, freelance journalist Linda Tirado was struck in
the left eye by a rubber bullet fired by police, and said later on
Twitter that she had permanently lost vision in that eye.

“Authorities in cities across the US need to instruct police not to
target journalists and ensure they can report safely on the protests
without fear of injury or retaliation,” said a statement from the
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).

Members of the media have also come under attack by protesters. In
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, photographer Ian Smith said he was subjected
to a beating until other demonstrators came to his defense.

In Atlanta, the headquarters of news network CNN was attacked
Friday by several dozen people. Someone in the crowd lobbed a flash
grenade into the building’s lobby as police stood guard there.

And on Saturday morning, a Fox News journalist who was reporting
from a position in front of the White House was pummeled and chased by
demonstrators until police intervened.

“If you are a protester, do what you feel is right, but don’t stop
us from doing what we know is the job we have to do for the public.
Please do not target, intimidate, humiliate or block our efforts,”
said a statement from the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ).

President Donald Trump has frequently targeted the news media as a
source of what he calls “fake news,” claiming without evidence that
the media invent stories intended to harm him.

Following the attack on the CNN building in Atlanta, the president
retweeted a supporter’s post that seemed to gloat about the incident:
“In an ironic twist of fate, CNN HQ is being attacked by the very
riots they promoted as noble & just. Oops.”

He has regularly denounced the press as “enemies of the people,”
and has often singled out CNN as a favorite target.

Media critics and commentators say such language can have the
effect, at least among fringe elements, of encouraging violence
against journalists.

BSS/AFP/MRU/2243hrs