AP president: Journalists ‘under attack’ worldwide

Gary Pruitt, Julie Pace
Gary Pruitt, left, president and CEO of The Associated Press, and Julie Pace, AP’s chief White House correspondent, take questions after speaking to editors and publishers at the Newspaper Association of America’s mediaXchange 2014 convention in Denver, Tuesday, March 18, 2014. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

NEW YORK (AP) — The president and CEO of The Associated Press says journalists around the world are “increasingly under attack” by people trying to influence and control the news.

Gary Pruitt spoke Monday at a news conference before a symposium focusing on some Al-Jazeera journalists imprisoned in Egypt.

Pruitt touched on the recent death of AP photojournalist Anja Niedringhaus (AHN’-yuh NEE’-dring-hows). She was killed last week in Afghanistan, and her colleague Kathy Gannon was seriously wounded. The women were covering the run-up to the country’s elections.

Pruitt says the increased dangers to reporters and the growing secrecy of governments make journalists’ jobs more challenging but also more important.

Egyptian authorities say the Al-Jazeera journalists engaged in terrorism-related offenses by providing a platform to the Muslim Brotherhood. Their defenders say they were doing their jobs as journalists.

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