This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 47, January 8-14, 2006
World Press
Freedom in 2005
Violence Still
Increasing: 63 Journalists Killed, More Than 1,300 Physically Attacked or
Threatened
BY
Reporters Without Borders
In 2005:
63 journalists and 5 media assistants were
killed
at least 807 journalists were arrested
1,308 physically attacked or threatened
and 1,006 media outlets censored
On 1 January
2006, 126 journalists and 70 cyber-dissidents were in jail around the
world
In 2004:
53 journalists and 15 media assistants
were killed
at least 907 journalists were arrested
at least 1,146 physically attacked or
threatened
and 622 media outlets censored
The deadliest year for a decade
At last 63 journalists were killed in 2005 while
doing their job or for expressing their opinions, the highest annual toll since
1995 (when 64 were killed, 22 of them in Algeria). Five media assistants
(fixers, drivers, translators, technicians, security staff and others) were also
killed.
For the third year running, Iraq was the world's
most dangerous country for the media, with 24 journalists and 5 media assistants
killed. 76 journalists and media assistants have been killed there since the
start of fighting in March 2003, more than in the 1955-75 Vietnam War.
Terrorist strikes and Iraqi guerrilla attacks were the main cause but the US
army killed three of them. Iraqi TV producer Wael al-Bakri, 30, was shot dead
by US troops on 28 June. A US Third Infantry Division spokesman admitted the
next day in Baghdad that a US unit was involved in his death and said an enquiry
had been opened. No result has been announced, nor in the other investigated
killings.
In the Philippines too, journalists were killed
while trying to inform the public. Their enemies were no longer armed groups
but politicians, businessmen and drug-traffickers ready to silence journalists
who exposed their crimes. Despite the conviction during the year of the killer
of journalist Edgar Damalerio, murdered in 2002 on the island of Mindanao,
impunity remained the rule. Journalists in other Asian countries (Afghanistan,
Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka) were also killed because of their
work.
Physical attacks on politicians and journalists
rocked Lebanon during the year and two leading journalists were killed - Samir
Kassir (in June) and Gebran Tueni (December). Kassir was a columnist for the
daily An-Nahar and Tueni was the paper's publisher. May Chidiac, a well-known
TV presenter with the station LBC, survived a bomb attack on her car in
September but lost a hand and a leg.
Several journalists were murdered in Russia and
Belarus in shady circumstances and some apparently because of their work.
Official investigations there, often biased and politically-influenced, hardly
ever produce results.
Physical attacks and threats keep on growing
More than 1,300 physical attacks and threats
were recorded by Reporters Without Borders during the year - more than in the
previous one.
Election campaigns often bring violence against
the media and national votes in Egypt and Azerbaijan saw dozens of physical
attacks on journalists reporting on demonstrations and the actual voting.
Prisons still full of journalists
JOURNALISTS IN JAIL
CHINA: 32
Cases of censorship up by more than half
At least 1,006 cases of censorship were
recording in 2005 (622 the previous year). The big rise was mostly due to the
much worse situation in Nepal, where more than half (567) of all cases worldwide
were recorded. Since the state of emergency declared by King Gyanendra on 1
February, the media has receiving a battering which is getting harsher. This
has included a ban on FM radio stations broadcasting news, blocking of websites,
seizure of equipment and politically-inspired distribution of government
advertising.
Censorship continues to rule in Belarus,
Kazakhstan and most of Central Asia and newspapers there are still shut down
just for criticising the government. Printers and distributors are often used to
exert pressure on independent or opposition publications.
The Internet under surveillance
CYBER-DISSIDENTS IN PRISON
These are the harshest towards online freedom of
expression and censor independent news websites and opposition publications, spy
on Internet traffic to silence dissident voices and harass, threaten and
sometimes throw in prison Internet users and bloggers who deviate from the
government line.
In Tunisia, for example, the family of President
Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali controls national access to the Internet and he has
built up very effective censorship, with the websites of all opposition
publications and many news sites blocked. The regime also dissuades people from
using webmail, which is harder to monitor than standard e-mail such as Outlook.
The Reporters Without Borders website also cannot be seen inside Tunisia. The
authorities imprison Internet users who defy them and pro-democracy lawyer
Mohammed Abbou was given a three-and-a-half-year jail sentence in April 2005 for
criticizing the president online.
The information ministry in Iran boasts that it
blocks access to hundreds of thousands of websites. The ruling ayatollahs
target any kind of sexual content and also independent news sites. Iran has the
grim distinction of having arrested and jailed the most bloggers - a score of
them were thrown in prison between autumn 2004 and summer 2005. Mojtaba
Saminejad, a 23-year-old blogger, has been in jail since February 2005. He was
given a two-year sentence in June for insulting the country's Supreme Guide.
Posted by Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
Posted by Bulatlat
Violence against journalists also increased in Africa, with journalists murdered
in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sierra Leone and Somalia and their killers
(some of them known) going unpunished. The investigation of the December 2004
murder of Gambian journalist Deyda Hydara, the local correspondent of Agence
France-Presse and Reporters Without Borders, made no progress because the
authorities did all they could to prevent those responsible from being
identified and to ensure they escaped punishment.
In the Americas, two journalists were killed in Mexico for investigating drug
smuggling and petrol racketeering.
These occurred almost daily in Bangladesh and Nepal and came from all sides -
police, government or opposition party activists and members of armed groups.
The attackers are very rarely punished and can thus continue to target
journalists undeterred.
Journalist Manjur Morshed was seriously injured when he was badly beaten with a
bamboo stick in the southern Bangladeshi town of Baufal in August by a
pro-government MP he had accused of corruption. Local journalists demonstrated
in protest against the attack.
About 50 journalists were beaten up by police, soldiers or henchmen of local
politicians in Nigeria and Peru and accused of not minding their own business.
Such violence was worse in the provinces and the journalists were mostly punched
or hit with sticks.
Other people attack journalists too and the Peruvian ambassador to Spain, during
a trip home to Lima in April, physically attacked a radio journalist who wanted
to interview him. The right arm of the reporter, Bettina Mendoza, of the
station CPN, was injured. The diplomat later apologized.
CUBA: 24
ETHIOPIA: 17
ERITREA: 13
BURMA: 5
The same countries are still the world's biggest prisons for journalists, whose
detention there gets ever longer. On 1 January 2006, 126 journalists and 3 media
assistants were being held in 23 countries (for the complete list, see
www.rsf.org).
In China, journalist and art critic Yu Dongyue has been in prison since the
Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989, serving an 18-year sentence for
"counter-revolutionary propaganda." He has gone mad as a result of torture.
Cuba is still the world's second-biggest prison for journalists and 20 of the 27
journalists arrested in the spring 2003 crackdown are serving sentences of
between 14 and 27 years. Four others were jailed in summer 2005 and two of them
have still to be tried.
In Burma, the country's best-known journalist/democrat, Win Tin, entered his
17th year in prison. The ruling generals stubbornly refused to release the
75-year-old former editor of the newspaper Hanthawathi.
Libyan writer Abdullah Ali al-Sanussi al-Darrat is the journalist who has been
in prison the longest of anyone He was arrested in 1973, very little is known
about him and Libyan officials have never answered repeated requests for
information by Reporters Without Borders. It is not known whether he is still
alive.
The privately-owned press was abolished in Eritrea in autumn 2001 and its former
editors and publishers are still in prison. A hunger strike by them in 2002 had
no effect. Their place of detention remains unknown and their families are
still not allowed to visit them.
The only figure that has fallen in the past year is the number of journalists
arrested (807 compared with 907 in 2004). But this is not good enough, because
every day an average of two journalists are arrested somewhere in the world just
for trying to do their job.
In China, the "broadcasting Great Wall" had new victims, with Voice of Tibet,
the BBC, Sound of Hope and Radio Free Asia among the radio stations jammed by
the regime with equipment from the French firm Thalès. Media and website
editors and publishers get an almost daily list from the government's propaganda
department of topics to avoid.
CHINA: 62
VIETNAM: 3
IRAN: 1
SYRIA: 1
The Internet is still tightly controlled by some repressive governments and
Reporters Without Borders has drawn up a list of 15 "enemies of the Internet"
(Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Iran, Libya, the Maldives, Nepal, North Korea,
Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam).