U.S. Secretary Rice addresses the Edward R. Murrow Journalism Program participants at the State Department, April 10, 2007. |
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Washington -- U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice praised journalists
for being on the front lines to report “some of the
most difficult conflicts in the world.”
Speaking April 10 at the State Department-sponsored
Edward R. Murrow Journalism program, Rice said journalists
very often have sacrificed their lives to bring the news
to the general public.
“And so I especially want to acknowledge
that sacrifice,” said Rice, speaking at the program,
which brought about 200 journalists from around the world
to examine journalistic practices in the United States.
The secretary welcomed the journalists to
America, saying the program, developed by the State Department’s
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, allows for an
interchange of discussion by journalists on vital foreign
policy issues.
Rice said, “There is no more important
pillar of democracy than a free and active press,”
what American “founding father” Thomas Jefferson
called "the fourth estate." Jefferson meant, said
the secretary, that without a free and active press, “the
people could not be certain that their views would be known
to their leaders and that their leaders’ views would
be known to them.”
In countries without freedom, said Rice,
journalists are the ones “who make the sacrifice and
endure the danger to try and report to the outside world
so that those places can be free. And so journalists are
not just reporters … of great events, they are also
very involved in making those events happen.”
The second annual Murrow program, planned
for April 7-28, involves a public-private partnership between
the State Department, the Washington-based Aspen Institute,
an international nonprofit group, and 12 leading U.S. schools
of journalism. Edward R. Murrow, a renowned figure in the
history of American broadcast journalism, served as the
director of the U.S. Information Agency from 1961 to 1964.
The contributions and sacrifices made by
journalists will also be recognized on World Press Freedom
Day May 3. The United States and the United Nations, among
others, will hold events that day to raise awareness of
the importance of press freedom. (See related article.)
RICE ON WORLD EVENTS
Following her opening remarks at the Murrow
forum, Rice fielded questions from the journalists on a
variety of topics, including the various crises afflicting
sub-Saharan Africa, the international force fighting the
Taliban in Afghanistan, the increase in the number of leftist
governments in Latin America, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict
in the Middle East and U.S. relations with Russia.
Regarding sub-Saharan Africa, Rice said
President Bush launched a $15 billion program to bring treatment
to hundreds of thousands of Africans suffering from AIDS.
In addition, Bush also announced a $1.43 billion malaria
initiative aimed at eradicating 50 percent of the malaria
cases on the African continent. On the conflict in the Darfur
region of Sudan, Rice said the United States continues to
be “very engaged” in trying to end the conflict
in which many thousands of people have lost their lives.
(See Darfur
Humanitarian Emergency.)
The secretary called Afghanistan a “remarkable
story,” saying that in 2001 the Taliban ruled that
nation. The brutal Taliban regime has been overthrown, said
Rice, replaced by a democratic government that “Afghans
went and voted for in huge numbers.” (See Rebuilding
Afghanistan.)
Rice said President Bush emphasized during
his March 8-14 trip to Latin America that the United States
can and will work with governments “wherever they
come from on the political spectrum, as long as they respect
democratic elections and values.”
Rice said she is “devoted to the creation
of a Palestinian state” so that a democratic Palestine
and Israel “can live side by side in peace.”
Both the Palestinians and the Israelis need
to recognize “that they’re going to have to
share the land,” said Rice. When they do, “there
is going to be a renunciation of violence and a respect
for each other,” Rice said.
Rice said the United States has, “essentially,
a good relationship” with Russia.
The two countries do not agree about everything,
“but we cooperate very well on a whole host of issues,”
said Rice.
Additional
information about the Morrow program and a transcript
of Rice’s remarks are available on the State Department
Web site.
Eric Green
USINFO Staff Writer
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