Save Journalism In Haiti!
Last week, unknown assailants invaded the premises of Haiti's oldest daily newspaper, Le Nouvelliste. They vandalized equipment and took away furniture and the raw materials needed to print the 126-year-old newspaper.
Le Nouvelliste, which had already shifted some of its operations away from the city’s center over a year ago due to kidnappings and the wave of violence, is now forced to beef up on its online presence and is contemplating charging subscribers a fee.
As a result of the turmoil, several other newsrooms in Haiti have closed. Media practitioners have lost their jobs. Since 2022, the year after the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, at least six journalists have been killed in connection with their work.
The killings and the impunity that has followed have made Haiti the world’s third-worst offender in failing to prosecute killers of journalists behind Syria and Somalia, according to the latest Global Impunity Index by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), which made its assessment between September 1, 2022 and August 31, 2023.
Even when journalists aren’t killed, some are targeted and injured. Investigative journalist Roberson Alphonse had to flee the country following an assassination attempt in October 2022 where his vehicle was sprayed with bullets as he headed to work.
On April 16, 2024, more than 90 Haitian journalists and the Paris-headquartered media advocacy group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) called on the international community and Haiti’s new Transitional Presidential Council to make support for journalists and the media a central plank of the discussions on a solution to the crisis. According to the joint appeal, Haiti’s journalists and news media must be protected so that the world can know what’s happening in Haiti, and the country doesn’t become an information desert.
On this World Press Freedom Day, 18º North is asking our readers to join us in supporting our fellow journalists in Haiti. All money raised will go to the media development organization, Institut Panos, established in 1986. Panos aims to provide items like recorders, bulletproof vests and helmets to facilitate journalists' work as well as to give small grants to reporters to produce stories on the environment and fighting disease like cholera, which has resurfaced and compounded the crisis.
You can donate to this organization by going to this GoFundMe page we’ve set up for the organization here:
You can also take out a yearly subscription to 18º North at a special discount rate of US$50, which is 50% off. By subscribing today, you’ll get the benefit of being first to see our investigations in full when they’re released, plus the satisfaction of knowing that all your spending with us for your first year will be turned over to Panos after the platforms we use - Substack and Stripe - take out their fees (just under 15% between the two).
Thank you for joining us as we aim to support journalists in Haiti.
18º North realizes journalism is important. But media practitioners who do it shouldn’t have to be restricted, attacked or kidnapped, or have to pay for it with their lives.
In solidarity with the Haitian press,
Zahra Burton
Founder and Chief Reporter of 18º North
and
Jean-Claude Louis
Coordinator of Institut Panos.