'My blood ran cold': Christiane Amanpour on Trump media comments - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:31 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

'My blood ran cold': Christiane Amanpour on Trump media comments

CBC's Diana Swain interviews renowned foreign correspondent Christiane Amanpour, who fears Donald Trump's comments about the media are dangerous.

Renowned CNN foreign correspondent 'worried' by current climate for journalists in U.S.

Christiane Amanpour won a Press Freedom Award earlier this week for 'extraordinary and sustained achievement in the cause of press freedom.' (CBC)

CNN chief international correspondent ChristianeAmanpour suggests Donald Trump's words about the media worry her "very much."

One of the world's best known foreign correspondentstold CBC's The Investigatorsthather "blood ran cold" when Donald Trump tweeted out that those who were protesting in the streets after his election win had been "incited by the media."

Amanpoursays several statements made in recent months by the U.S. president-elect in which he has variously described journalists as "despicable and dishonest," "crooked" and "liars" can be the beginning of a dangerous political narrative.

Earlier this week, Trump held meetings withseveral high-profile U.S. journalists, including some of Amanpour's CNN colleagues. The gathering with TV network executives and anchors atTrump Tower in Manhattanwas later reported to be a dressing-down by the president-elect for what he considered their unfair treatment of him during the election campaign.

Speaking to CBC News for this week's edition of The Investigators, Amanpour, who has reported extensively from Europe and the Middle East, suggested Trump's language is worryingly similar to that of leaders in non-democratic parts of the world, where journalists are routinely demonized, and in some cases evenjailed for their work.

"They target the pressand set the press up as an opposition to the government, and they do it by subtly ratcheting up the accusations against the press so,inciting, sympathizing, associating, actually being terrorists and subversives," she says.

"And, as you know, journalists around the world are routinely locked up, put in jail, put on trial on phoney charges. So that's why that worried me very much, and I felt I had to push back on thatand take a stand against that."

She made that stand Wednesday, when shewas given an award by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists for "extraordinary and sustained achievement in the cause of press freedom."

In her acceptance speech, Amanpour said the current hostile climate for reporters in the United States, including the rise of so-called fake news, hasled to an "existential crisis" for journalists, a "threat to the very relevance and usefulness of our profession."

Amanpour says journalists can't lose their nerve now, at such a critical time.

"We have to fight to defend facts right now," she told CBC News, "in what's being described as a 'post-truth'world."

The Investigators with Diana Swain: Christiane Amanpour interview

8 years ago
Duration 4:09
CNN foreign correspondent talks Trump, fake news and how important it is to "defend the truth"

Also this week onThe Investigators, CBC News foreign correspondent Margaret Evans, who has just returned from Syria, talks about the challenges of reporting from a war zone in the company of a government minder.And Marketplace producer Tyana Grundig talks about the show'sinvestigation into the changing strength of marijuana.