Post by account_disabled on Feb 19, 2024 23:18:44 GMT -5
About a week after 'Reporters Without Borders' pointed the finger at the Prime Minister of Albania as the direct culprit for the loss of 20 countries in just one year, in the classification of press freedom, it seems that the journalists who went to Edi Rama's conference had heard him this bell. Today, in the question-and-answer session with reporters about the problems of justice reform, they showed some glimpses of how the real relationship between the media and political power should be. Journalist Ambrozia Meta, who became the apple of the row in the lines with 'Reporters sans frontieres', after her exclusion from press conferences, did an act that we don't usually see. When Rama did not directly answer the question of one of her MCN TV colleagues, she repeated the question.
The return of this lost Brazil Telegram Number Data solidarity between colleagues, who do not allow themselves to be trampled by the pressure that the head of government exerts on their owners, is an act of racial journalism. But the 'star' of the day today became the journalist of A2CNN, Klevi Muka, who first asked the prime minister if it was moral to talk about justice and keep a minister of justice like Ulsi Manja by his side, who appeared in the wiretapping of the theft file. of the elections in Dibër. Read also: Korreshi's orders for the protesters: Take bread, pie and buttermilk with you! Horoscope, Tuesday, February 20, 2023/ What the stars have predicted for your sign This normal question, the prime minister labeled as an ethical transgression and immediately received the answer that left him stunned: 'if you think that ethics is taught better in the school of painting than in the school of journalism, then go ahead'.
With this stance, which derailed the 'enemy of free media', journalist Muka not only defended his dignity and integrity, but above all that of all his colleagues and especially that of those who represent large TV stations, who, when they are not repeating prepared questions by heart, their only concern is not to disturb their masters. But a new breed of reporters seems to be seeking to break free from this shameful role of questioner-parrot. They are becoming aware of the public responsibility they have on their shoulders and are seeking to be emancipated from being labeled as the owner's courier in the prime minister's salon. And in doing so they are honoring themselves by making fun of London-based reptiles. The example of Klevi Muka, as well as the already installed model of Ambrozia Meta, are evidence of how easily the curtain of propaganda can be torn.
The return of this lost Brazil Telegram Number Data solidarity between colleagues, who do not allow themselves to be trampled by the pressure that the head of government exerts on their owners, is an act of racial journalism. But the 'star' of the day today became the journalist of A2CNN, Klevi Muka, who first asked the prime minister if it was moral to talk about justice and keep a minister of justice like Ulsi Manja by his side, who appeared in the wiretapping of the theft file. of the elections in Dibër. Read also: Korreshi's orders for the protesters: Take bread, pie and buttermilk with you! Horoscope, Tuesday, February 20, 2023/ What the stars have predicted for your sign This normal question, the prime minister labeled as an ethical transgression and immediately received the answer that left him stunned: 'if you think that ethics is taught better in the school of painting than in the school of journalism, then go ahead'.
With this stance, which derailed the 'enemy of free media', journalist Muka not only defended his dignity and integrity, but above all that of all his colleagues and especially that of those who represent large TV stations, who, when they are not repeating prepared questions by heart, their only concern is not to disturb their masters. But a new breed of reporters seems to be seeking to break free from this shameful role of questioner-parrot. They are becoming aware of the public responsibility they have on their shoulders and are seeking to be emancipated from being labeled as the owner's courier in the prime minister's salon. And in doing so they are honoring themselves by making fun of London-based reptiles. The example of Klevi Muka, as well as the already installed model of Ambrozia Meta, are evidence of how easily the curtain of propaganda can be torn.