On va enfin avoir un travail journalistique digne de ce nom sur le dossier Aser Aee Power avec cette enquête en 3 volets de @ouestafnews https://t.co/Pfhsh6Cw7m
Par exemple : Yango m’a proposé un course à aller récupérer sur plus de 1km liberté 3 destination à 32 minutes HLM grand Yoff le client doit payer 600f😔. Sur la route j’ai croisé les policiers il m’ont demandé les papiers je lui ai donné la carte à grise mais pas le permis…..
I want to highlight a few important points here.
If there were no freedom of the press allowing CNN to do reports showing daily life in Iran during the war, no one would know that the impacts have been minimal.
If there were no freedom of the press, we would not know that aerial investigations point to an American attack responsible for the deaths of 160 girls in an Iranian school.
If there were no freedom of the press, Israel’s Channel 14 would not be working around the clock to produce extensive reports on the relentless attacks constantly striking Israel.
These are values that many nations still need to learn. Although intelligence services plant fabricated stories from time to time, journalists in much of the West still have the freedom to investigate and publish their coverage.
Although this is one of the West’s greatest achievements, the current invasions are not aimed at exporting these values, neither in Venezuela, where nothing has changed, nor in Iran. These are wars of colonization for resources and political influence.
The press, not only American, but in many countries, has been working honestly with the often suppressed or edited material that reaches them. Such is the reality of wartime. Congratulations to all the professionals covering this and other conflicts.