Witness History

The origins of World Press Freedom Day

May 1, 2026
Gwen Lister, a veteran Namibian newspaper editor and press freedom campaigner, chaired the 1991 Windhoek seminar. She recalls tension running a paper under threat and the risks she faced, as well as the drafting and adoption of the Windhoek Declaration. The conversation traces how those five days led to global recognition of press freedom and the creation of World Press Freedom Day.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Windhoek Seminar United Isolated Journalists

  • The 1991 UNESCO seminar in Windhoek gathered 63 journalists from 38 African countries to push for independent, pluralistic press as foundational to democracy.
  • The meeting followed regional isolation under apartheid and let previously unconnected journalists meet and coordinate advocacy.
ANECDOTE

Jailed Journalists Were Brought To Windhoek

  • Organisers had to secure releases and visas so jailed or blocked journalists could attend, showing the personal cost of participation.
  • Namibia's new government was initially suspicious and only sent Prime Minister Hage Geingob to the opening, not the president.
ANECDOTE

Gwen Lister Survived Violence For Reporting

  • Gwen Lister endured arrests, detention while pregnant, firebombs, and bullet attacks on her newspaper for reporting on apartheid abuses.
  • Her paper required bulletproof windows and faced repeated phosphorus grenades and physical threats to staff and premises.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app