The Guardian revealed the NSA's bulk
collection of phone records 10 months ago based on Edward Snowden's leaks.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
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Investigative reporter Laura Poitras
accepts the George Polk Award alongside Barton Gellman, far left, and Ewen
MacAskill. Photograph: Andrew Burton/Getty Images
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Guardian and Washington Post win Pulitzer prize for NSA
revelations
Pair awarded highest accolade in US journalism, winning Pulitzer
prize for public service for stories on NSA surveillance
Ed
Pilkington in New York
The
Guardian, Monday 14 April 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/media/2014/apr/14/guardian-washington-post-pulitzer-nsa-revelations
The
Guardian and the Washington Post have been awarded the highest accolade in US
journalism, winning the Pulitzer prize for public service for their
groundbreaking articles on the National Security Agency’s surveillance
activities based on the leaks of Edward Snowden.
The award,
announced in New York on Monday, comes 10 months after the Guardian published
the first report based on the leaks from Snowden, revealing the agency’s bulk
collection of US citizens’ phone records.
In the
series of articles that ensued, teams of journalists at the Guardian and the
Washington Post published the most substantial disclosures of US government
secrets since the Pentagon Papers on the Vietnam war in 1971.
The
Pulitzer committee praised the Guardian for its "revelation of widespread
secret surveillance by the National Security Agency, helping through aggressive
reporting to spark a debate about the relationship between the government and
the public over issues of security and privacy".
Snowden, in
a statement, said: "Today's decision is a vindication for everyone who
believes that the public has a role in government. We owe it to the efforts of
the brave reporters and their colleagues who kept working in the face of
extraordinary intimidation, including the forced destruction of journalistic
materials, the inappropriate use of terrorism laws, and so many other means of
pressure to get them to stop what the world now recognises was work of vital
public importance."
He said
that his actions in leaking the documents that formed the basis of the
reporting "would have been meaningless without the dedication, passion,
and skill of these newspapers".
The
Pulitzers have been bestowed since 1917, at the bequest of the legendary
newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer who established the honour in his will as a
means of encouraging publicly-spirited journalism. Awards were given in 22
categories this year: the Boston Globe received the Pulitzer for breaking for
"exhaustive and empathetic" coverage of the Boston marathon bombing. Journalists in the
Globe newsroom observed a period of silence on Monday in memory of the victims,
a day before the one-year anniversary of the attack.
At the
Guardian, the NSA reporting was led by Glenn Greenwald, Ewen MacAskill and
film-maker Laura Poitras, and at the Washington Post by Barton Gellman, who
also co-operated with Poitras. All four journalists were honoured with a George
Polk journalism award last week for their work on the NSA story.
The NSA revelations have reverberated
around the world and sparked a debate in the US over the balance between
national security and personal privacy. On the back of the disclosures,
President Obama ordered a White House review into data surveillance, a number
of congressional reform bills have been introduced, and protections have begun
to be put in place to safeguard privacy for foreign leaders and to increase
scrutiny over the NSA’s mass data collection.
"We are truly honoured that our
journalism has been recognised with the Pulitzer prize," said Alan
Rusbridger, the editor-in-chief of the Guardian. "This was a complex
story, written, edited and produced by a team of wonderful journalists. We are
particularly grateful for our colleagues across the world who supported the Guardian
in circumstances which threatened to stifle our reporting. And we share this
honour, not only with our colleagues at the Washington Post, but also with
Edward Snowden, who risked so much in the cause of the public service which has
today been acknowledged by the award of this prestigious prize."
Janine Gibson, the editor-in-chief of
Guardian US, said: "We're extremely proud and gratified to have been
honoured by the Pulitzer board. It's been an intense, exhaustive and sometimes
chilling year working on this story, and we're grateful for the acknowledgement
by our peers that the revelations made by Edward Snowden and the work by the
journalists involved represent a high achievement in public service."
Among the disclosures were:
• the NSA’s mass dragnet of phone records
of millions of Americans.
• the program codenamed Prism used by the
NSA and its UK
counterpart GCHQ to gain back-door entry into the data of nine giant internet
companies including Google and Facebook.
• the cracking of internet encryption by
the NSA and GCHQ that undermined personal security for web users.
• NSA surveillance of phone calls made by
35 world leaders.
The coverage of the Snowden leaks presented
a particularly thorny issue for the 19-strong panel of journalists, academics
and writers who recommend the winners. The stream of disclosures invoked strong
and polarised reactions in the US
and around the world.
In January, Obama said that the debate on
the acceptable limits of government surveillance prompted by the articles “will
make us stronger”. But other prominent US politicians such as Mike Rogers,
Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee, have suggested
journalism based on Snowden’s leaks was tantamount to dealing in stolen
property.
Snowden has been charged with three
offences in the US .
He is the eighth person to be charged with breaking the 1917 Espionage Act by
the Obama administration – more than all the prosecutions brought under
previous presidents combined.
The Guardian's US
operation, headquartered in New York , was
incorporated as an American company in 2011 and recognised last year by the
Pulitzer board as a US
news outlet eligible to be considered for its prizes.
Last month Rusbridger was given a special
award at the European press awards; earlier this month the Guardian was named
newspaper of the year in the UK ;
and there it has been awarded other prizes for online and investigative
journalism in Germany , Spain and the US .
The Snowden stories were edited from New York by Gibson, and
Guardian US deputy editor Stuart Millar. The UK end of the reporting was led by
deputy editor Paul Johnson and investigations editor Nick Hopkins.
Others on the team of journalists included
Spencer Ackerman, James Ball, David Blishen, Gabriel Dance, Julian Borger, Nick
Davies, David Leigh and Dominic Rushe. In Australia the editor was Katharine
Viner and the reporter Lenore Taylor.
Among the other Pulitzers, Will Hobson and
Michael LaForgia of the Tampa Bay Times won for local reporting for their
investigation into the housing blight of the city’s homeless population; and
the New York Times’s Tyler Hicks and Josh Haner took the two photography prizes.
The Pulitzer for fiction writing went to
Donna Tartt for The Goldfinch, while Annie Baker won the prize for drama for
her play set in a cinema, The Flick. Become Ocean, a piece commissioned by the
Seattle Symphony by John Luther Adams, won the Pulitzer for music.
Edward
Snowden said: 'Today's decision is a vindication for everyone who believes that
the public has a role in government.'
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Edward Snowden on Pulitzer
winners: 'Their work has given us a better future'
NSA whistleblower praises Guardian and Washington Post after pair share
Pulitzer prize for public service
Guardian
staff
theguardian.com,
Monday 14 April 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/14/edward-snowden-pulitzer-statement-prize-guardian-washington-post
The former
NSA contractor Edward Snowden issued a statement on Monday in response to the
decision by the Pulitzer prize committee to reward the Guardian and the
Washington Post with its top 2014 award. It reads, in full:
I am
grateful to the committee for their recognition of the efforts of those
involved in the last year's reporting, and join others around the world in
congratulating Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras, Barton Gellman, Ewen MacAskill
and all of the others at the Guardian and Washington Post on winning the Pulitzer
Prize for Public Service.
Today's
decision is a vindication for everyone who believes that the public has a role
in government. We owe it to the efforts of the brave reporters and their
colleagues who kept working in the face of extraordinary intimidation,
including the forced destruction of journalistic materials, the inappropriate
use of terrorism laws, and so many other means of pressure to get them to stop
what the world now recognises was work of vital public importance.
This
decision reminds us that what no individual conscience can change, a free press
can. My efforts would have been meaningless without the dedication, passion,
and skill of these newspapers, and they have my gratitude and respect for their
extraordinary service to our society. Their work has given us a better future
and a more accountable democracy.
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