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(just a blurb with some of their collaboration with CIA and UK gov)
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'''Reuters''' is a pro-[[imperialism]] [[news agency]] created in 1851, [[London]].
{{Infobox company|name=Reuters|image=Reuters logo 2024.svg.png|founding_date=October 1851|founder=Paul Julius Reuter|industry=[[Bourgeois media]]|headquarters=5 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, [[London]], [[England]]|ownership=[[Thomson Reuters]]}}


Despite its self-proclaimed integrous, independent, and bias-free reporting,<ref>{{Web citation|author=Reuters|title=About Reuters Fact Check|url=https://www.reuters.com/fact-check/about|quote=Our journalists work all over the world and are guided by the Trust Principles, which state that Reuters must report the news with integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.}}</ref> the agency has been found at several different times to collaborate with agencies such as the [[CIA]] or [[UK Foreign Office]].
'''Reuters''' is a worldwide [[news agency]] with an [[imperialist]] bias established in [[London]] in 1851.


Reuters was funded by the UK's now-defunct Information Research Department during the 1960s and 70s so that they could expand their coverage of [[West Asia]]<ref>{{Web citation|author=Martin Rosenbaum|newspaper=BBC|title=How the UK secretly funded a Middle East news agency|date=2020-01-13|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-50637200}}</ref> -- at a time when the UK was active in destabilizing governments in [[Republic of Yemen|Yemen]], [[Islamic Republic of Iran|Iran]] and [[Kingdom of Saudi Arabia|Saudi Arabia]]. The same department also funded Reuters' expansion in South America.
Despite its self-proclaimed integrous, independent, and bias-free reporting,<ref>{{Web citation|author=Reuters|title=About Reuters Fact Check|url=https://www.reuters.com/fact-check/about|quote=Our journalists work all over the world and are guided by the Trust Principles, which state that Reuters must report the news with integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.}}</ref> the agency has been found at several different times to have collaborated with agencies such as the [[CIA]] or [[UK Foreign Office]].


On July 2023, [[The Grayzone]] published leaked documents that showed the UK Foreign Office funded a Reuters media outlet in [[Egypt]] to the tune of 2 million [[British pound|British pounds]].<ref>{{Web citation|author=Kit Klarenberg|newspaper=The Grayzone|title=Leaked documents reveal Reuters helped overthrow Egyptian democracy|date=2023-06-05|url=https://thegrayzone.com/2023/07/05/reuters-overthrow-egyptian-democracy/}}</ref> The outlet, called ''Aswat Masriya'', defended General [[Abdel Fattah Sisi]]’s violent coup in 2013, which led to mass incarcerations and a [[human rights]] crisis. By 2016, ''Aswat Masriya'' was one of the 500 most visited websites in Egypt.
Reuters was funded by the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland|UK]]'s now-defunct [[Information Research Department]] during the 1960s and 70s so that they could expand their coverage of [[West Asia]]<ref>{{Web citation|author=Martin Rosenbaum|newspaper=BBC|title=How the UK secretly funded a Middle East news agency|date=2020-01-13|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-50637200}}</ref> -- at a time when the UK was active in destabilizing governments in [[Republic of Yemen|Yemen]], [[Islamic Republic of Iran|Iran]] and [[Kingdom of Saudi Arabia|Saudi Arabia]]. The same department also funded Reuters' expansion in [[South America]].
 
On July 2023, [[The Grayzone]] published leaked documents that showed the UK Foreign Office funded a Reuters media outlet in [[Egypt]] to the tune of 2 million [[British pound|British pounds]].<ref>{{Web citation|author=Kit Klarenberg|newspaper=The Grayzone|title=Leaked documents reveal Reuters helped overthrow Egyptian democracy|date=2023-06-05|url=https://thegrayzone.com/2023/07/05/reuters-overthrow-egyptian-democracy/}}</ref> The outlet, called ''Aswat Masriya'', defended General [[Abdel Fattah Sisi]]’s violent coup in 2013, which led to mass incarcerations and a [[human rights]] crisis. By 2016, ''Aswat Masriya'' was one of the 500 most visited websites in Egypt before its closure.


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />
[[Category:Companies based in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Imperialist companies]]
[[Category:Imperialist propaganda]]
[[Category:Newspapers]]

Latest revision as of 18:25, 16 November 2024

Reuters
IndustryBourgeois media
FoundedOctober 1851
FounderPaul Julius Reuter
Headquarters5 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London, England
OwnershipThomson Reuters


Reuters is a worldwide news agency with an imperialist bias established in London in 1851.

Despite its self-proclaimed integrous, independent, and bias-free reporting,[1] the agency has been found at several different times to have collaborated with agencies such as the CIA or UK Foreign Office.

Reuters was funded by the UK's now-defunct Information Research Department during the 1960s and 70s so that they could expand their coverage of West Asia[2] -- at a time when the UK was active in destabilizing governments in Yemen, Iran and Saudi Arabia. The same department also funded Reuters' expansion in South America.

On July 2023, The Grayzone published leaked documents that showed the UK Foreign Office funded a Reuters media outlet in Egypt to the tune of 2 million British pounds.[3] The outlet, called Aswat Masriya, defended General Abdel Fattah Sisi’s violent coup in 2013, which led to mass incarcerations and a human rights crisis. By 2016, Aswat Masriya was one of the 500 most visited websites in Egypt before its closure.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. “Our journalists work all over the world and are guided by the Trust Principles, which state that Reuters must report the news with integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.”

    Reuters. "About Reuters Fact Check"
  2. Martin Rosenbaum (2020-01-13). "How the UK secretly funded a Middle East news agency" BBC.
  3. Kit Klarenberg (2023-06-05). "Leaked documents reveal Reuters helped overthrow Egyptian democracy" The Grayzone.