Journalists are among the unsung heroes of the pandemic.

Reporters, producers, subeditors, camera operators and many others continue to lift the national mood with stories of joy and hope and fearlessly bring us reliable, fact-based reporting at a time when the rise in false and misleading information is threatening public health.

But there are too many reports of decent hard-working people who put the public interest at the heart of what they do falling victim to violence or having their safety threatened - whether that is being punched in the street, threatened with knives or subject to rape and death threats.

It will never be acceptable for people to behave like this. If a journalist cannot report on a rugby match without facing the wrath of online trolls - as happened recently when BBC journalist Sonja McLaughlan was left in tears after covering the Six Nations - then something must be done.

The government has published its first ever national action plan to clamp down on the abuse and harassment of journalists.

Endorsed by the National Committee for the Safety of Journalists, the plan sees the government joining forces with a wide range of stakeholders - from the police and lawyers to unions and social media companies - setting out bold commitments to protect journalists’ safety in the UK.

The plan will tackle abuse on several fronts. The Media Lawyers Association will provide guidance to help journalists know when the behaviour they’re subject to is illegal, and what they can do about it. Facebook and Twitter have pledged to respond promptly to threats made against journalists on their platforms.

A raft of new safety training initiatives will be launched for journalists and others who work with the media. Student journalists will get safety training by the National Council for the Training for Journalists, with broadcasters and publishers committing to provide similar support for working journalists.

The police will assign journalist safety liaison officers and team up with the National Union of Journalists and Society of Editors to update officer training to emphasise the important and changing role of journalists.

On top of that, the government will soon launch a wide-reaching call for evidence to get a deeper understanding of the nature and scale of journalist abuse, and this year will bring forward world-leading online harms laws to compel social media companies to take tougher action on illegal and harmful content - with huge fines for those who fall short.

Any journalist suffering abuse or threats is one too many, but I am confident that the UK can set an international example for the respect, treatment and protection of journalists this plan is the first step towards that.

John Whittingdale, Minister for Media and Data