Anchored in truth: A declaration for World Press Freedom Day

There are professions that exist simply to serve a market. And then there are those that exist to serve a society. Journalism is the latter – and on this World Press Freedom Day, we, the members of Jamaica’s media community, do not simply mark a date on a calendar. We reaffirm a covenant.
It is a covenant that predates the digital age, predates the algorithm, and will outlast whatever disruption comes next. It is, at its core, a promise: that someone will be in the room when power is exercised, that someone will ask the question others cannot or will not ask, and that the public – every Jamaican, regardless of parish, profession, or persuasion – will have access to information that allows them to live, choose, and participate as informed citizens.
That promise has never been cheap to keep.
What We Have Built – And Why It Matters
Across our newsrooms, our broadcast studios, our digital platforms and community outlets, Jamaica’s media sector has made sustained, deliberate investments in the craft and infrastructure of accountability journalism. We have trained reporters to navigate complexity and verify facts under pressure. We have built editorial standards designed not to please, but to inform. We have sent journalists into communities, boardrooms, courthouses and corridors of power – not for spectacle, but for truth.
This is not work for the faint of heart. It never has been. Holding authority to account, investigating where information lies buried, and giving audiences a genuine choice through fair and factual reporting – these are acts that attract resistance. We know this. We accept it. We press on regardless.
The Headwinds Are Real
We would be less than honest if we did not acknowledge the environment we operate in today. The media landscape has been fundamentally disrupted. The economics of our industry have shifted beneath our feet. The platforms that now carry public discourse were built not around editorial responsibility, but around engagement – and that engagement, as we have all witnessed, is too easily fueled by falsehood.
Misinformation and disinformation are not abstract threats. They are daily realities that our journalists navigate while producing their work, that our audiences must contend with in their feeds, and that our democracy cannot afford to ignore. When fabricated content travels faster than verified reporting, when rumour outpaces record, the damage is not merely reputational – it is civic.
It erodes the informed consent on which any functioning society depends.
And yet – we are not faint of heart.
Resilience as a Practice, Not a Slogan
What keeps us anchored is not nostalgia for a simpler era. It is our communities. It is the reader who writes in to say a story changed something for them. It is the citizen who acts on information we surfaced. It is the policy that shifted because light was shone where darkness had been comfortable. These are not abstract victories. They are the daily proof that credibility is still currency, and that reliable, fact-based journalism remains among the most consequential services a society needs to have.
Our resilience is not passive endurance. It is active, deliberate, and renewed every time a journalist sits down to verify before publishing, every time an editor pushes back on an unsubstantiated claim, every time a media house chooses integrity over convenience. We trade in credibility because we understand that once it is spent carelessly, it cannot easily be reclaimed. That discipline – unglamorous, often thankless – is our contribution to the national fabric.
Adaptation Without Abandonment
Yes, we have had to adapt. We have followed our audiences onto new platforms, embraced new formats, and reimagined how journalism is delivered. We will continue to do so. The medium is not sacred – the mission is. And that mission – to inform, to investigate, to give voice to the voiceless and hold the powerful accountable – does not change because the device in your hand has.
What we will not do is adapt our principles. The commitment to accuracy, fairness, independence and public interest journalism is not negotiable, not archaic, and not optional. It is the reason we exist.
A Renewed Commitment
On this World Press Freedom Day, we speak not from a position of comfort, but from one of conviction. Jamaica’s media sector faces real pressures – financial, technological, and societal. We do not pretend otherwise. But we remain steadfast in our belief that an informed citizenry is the foundation of a functioning democracy, and that the work of journalism – at its best – is among the most honourable and necessary contributions any professional community can make to national life.
To the public we serve: we see you, we are with you, and we are not going anywhere.
To those who would diminish, discredit, or obstruct independent journalism: we note you – and we continue.
The press is not free because freedom is handed to us. It is free because we choose, every day, to practice it.