Our RSS feeds
LATEST JOBS:
resize text: decrease text sizereset text size increase text size

Online Journalism News

End casual working arrangements for danger zone journalists, says Peyton's family

The family of Kate Peyton, the journalist murdered in Somalia in 2005, has called for a change in employment law to aid journalists making the decision to travel to high-risk areas of the world.

Speaking to Journalism.co.uk in an interview in which they criticised the BBC's handling of their sister's case, Kate Peyton's siblings - Charles and Rebecca Peyton - said they wanted to work with media organisations to reform working arrangements for journalists in dangerous places.

They believe their sister felt pressure to travel to Mogadishu to preserve her career and ensure the renewal of her contract with the BBC.

A system which only asks staff on permanent and secure contracts to travel to dangerous parts of the world is needed, the pair told Journalism.co.uk.

"There needs to be a bias in favour of people who are in permanent jobs. There is a tendency of employers that if you can have people on short-term contracts, it's going to keep them on their toes," said Charles Peyton, who added that it is not just the BBC which is at fault as an employer.

"That's fine for most kinds of journalism, but if part of the job is regular trips to dangerous places, that's an unfair tool to be using."

A 'quasi-independent' BBC service - separate from human resources and newsrooms - should be established, he suggested, 'as a devil's advocate department' through which staff would be able to raise concerns and seek impartial advice about potentially dangerous decisions, without jeopardising their careers.

Rebecca Peyton told Journalism.co.uk her sister had travelled to Somalia to 'prove her commitment' after turning down an assigment in Iraq the previous year.

Kate Peyton's siblings said their sister felt enormous pressure to seek career security to support her partner and his daughter and this was part of her decision to take up the assignment in Somalia, despite knowing it was a high-risk destination. 

Jeremy Dear, president of the National Union of Journalists, supported their ideas in a comment piece for Guardian.co.uk published on Thursday and called for an end to the 'casualisation of war reporting'.

Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
freelance | bbc | nuj | international | media law | national union of journalists | employment law | british broadcasting corporation | kate peyton | rebecca peyton | charles peyton |

Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.

Got a story? Email our news team: Laura Oliver; Judith Townend or telephone +44 (0)1273 384290. You can also follow us on Twitter: @journalismnews / @LauraOliver / @JTownend.

Comments

No comments

You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:

    

Forgotten your password? Please click here



JOB OF THE WEEK

Online content producer (full-time contract - six months)

With experience writing for online and working to daily deadlines, expertise in home products and the ability to turn complex technical copy into an online story that answers key consumer questions for Which? ...more

Freelancers for hire

...see all

DISPLAY ADVERTISING

image

Target our journalism community of 17,200 subscribers and 140k+ visitors monthly. Call Chris on 01273 384291

Advertisements

How fast is your broadband?

Broadband Speed

Test your speed now

Click for
mobile broadband deals from Mobile Broadband Genie


Compare Broadband

Alternatively take a look at mobile broadband packages.