Arrangements of the international protection of journalists during conflicts armed

Abstract

Journalists during international armed conflicts and non-international to the real risks may go beyond the limit harm to body or freedom, but may end up being subjected to the murder. And because the journalist is a witness on the outcome of the dispute or, rather, is the witness and the judge and publisher of the commitment of parties to the conflict to the principles and rules of international humanitarian law. And that article 79 of Protocol I has not been established and a new situation for journalists, but referred the rule of the press to the development of civil, with its immunities and the consequent obligations of a journalist into a dual responsibility witness a neutral professional technology, media and civilians have become a victim of serious violations during armed conflicts and that the character of this responsibility is imposed on the press to imagine and accept these risks and to impose on the parties to the dispute acknowledge supremacy of the values ​​of the profession due regard

Keywords

Journalists during international armed conflicts and non-international to the real risks may go beyond the limit harm to body or freedom, but may end up being subjected to the murder. And because the journalist is a witness on the outcome of the dispute or, rather, is the witness and the judge and publisher of the commitment of parties to the conflict to the principles and rules of international humanitarian law. And that article 79 of Protocol I has not been established and a new situation for journalists, but referred the rule of the press to the development of civil, with its immunities and the consequent obligations of a journalist into a dual responsibility witness a neutral professional technology, media and civilians have become a victim of serious violations during armed conflicts and that the character of this responsibility is imposed on the press to imagine and accept these risks and to impose on the parties to the dispute acknowledge supremacy of the values ​​of the profession due regard