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The
2005 Worldwide Press Freedom Index
Reporters sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
October
20, 2005
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the 2005 Worldwide Press Freedom Index
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North Korea,
Eritrea and Turkmenistan are the world's "black holes" for news
More and
more African countries move up the list
North Korea once again comes bottom of the Reporters Without
Borders fourth annual World Press Freedom Index, released today.
It is closely followed in the 167-country list by Eritrea (166th)
and Turkmenistan (165th), which are other "black holes" for news
where the privately-owned media is not allowed and freedom of expression
does not exist.
Journalists there simply relay government propaganda. Anyone out
of step is harshly dealt with. A word too many, a commentary that
deviates from the official line or a wrongly-spelled name and the
author may be thrown in prison or draw the wrath of those in power.
Harassment, psychological pressure, intimidation and round-the-clock
surveillance are routine.
East Asia (Burma 163rd, China 159th, Vietnam 158th, Laos 155th),
Central Asia (Turkmenistan 165th, Uzbekistan 155th, Afghanistan
125th, Kazakhstan 119th) and the Middle East (Iran 164th, Iraq 157th,
Saudi Arabia 154th, Syria 145th) are where journalists have the
toughest time and where government repression or armed groups prevent
the media operating freely.
The situation in Iraq (157th) deteriorated further during the year
as the safety of journalists became more precarious. At least 24
journalists and media assistants have been killed so far this year,
making it the mostly deadly conflict for the media since World War
II. A total of 72 media workers have been killed since the fighting
began in March 2003.
But more and more African and Latin American countries (Benin 25th,
Namibia 25th, El Salvador 28th, Cape Verde 29th, Mauritius 34th,
Mali 37th, Costa Rica 41st and Bolivia 45th) are getting very good
rankings.
Western democracies slip back
Some Western democracies slipped down the Index. The United
States (44th) fell more than 20 places, mainly because of the imprisonment
of New York Times reporter Judith Miller and legal moves
undermining the privacy of journalistic sources. Canada (21st) also
dropped several places due to decisions that weakened the privacy
of sources and sometimes turned journalists into "court auxiliaries."
France (30th) also slipped, largely because of searches of media
offices, interrogations of journalists and introduction of new press
offences.
At the top of the Index once again are northern European countries
Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Iceland, Norway and the Netherlands,
where robust press freedom is firmly established. The top 10 countries
are all European. New Zealand (12th), Trinidad and Tobago (12th),
Benin (25th) and South Korea (34th) are the highest-ranked countries
in other continents.
Press freedom, economic development and independence
Countries that have recently won their independence or have
recovered it are very observant of press freedom and give the lie
to the insistence of many authoritarian leaders that democracy takes
decades to establish itself. Nine states that have had independence
(or recovered it within the past 15 years) are among the top 60
countries - Slovenia (9th), Estonia (11th), Latvia (16th), Lithuania
(21st), Namibia (25th), Bosnia-Herzegovina (33rd), Macedonia (43rd),
Croatia (56th) and East Timor (58th).
The Index also contradicts the frequent argument by leaders of poor
and repressive countries that economic development is a vital precondition
for democracy and respect for human rights. The top of the Index
is heavily dominated by rich countries, but several very poor ones
(with a per capita GDP of less than $1,000 in 2003) are among the
top 60, such as Benin (25th), Mali (37th), Bolivia (45th), Mozambique
(49th), Mongolia (53rd), Niger (57th) and East Timor (58th).
Two reasons for improvement
More African countries are moving up into the top half of the
index each year thanks to their progress in the fight against impunity
and the abolition of prison terms for press offences such as libel
and slander and the printing of inaccurate news.
While those
that usually respect press freedom - Cape Verde (29th), South Africa
(31st), Mauritius (34th) and Mali (37th) - kept their positions
in 2005, Mozambique jumped from 64th to 49th place. Heavy sentences
passed on the killers of Mozambican journalist Carlos Cardoso helped
to calm a situation which was difficult in the late 1990s. Decriminalisation
of press offences in the Central African Republic lifted the country
from 104th to 82nd place and Angola (76th) also improved its ranking
further due to legal reforms as it emerged from a long civil war.
Continued failure to punish the murderers of Norbert Zongo in Burkina
Faso (78th) and unfulfilled promises of decriminalisation by President
Abdoulaye Wade in Senegal (79th) prevented these countries from
moving up, though the situation was worse in Cameroon (83rd), where
journalists are still routinely thrown in prison. Internationally-observed
elections allowed Guinea-Bissau (71st) and Liberia (83rd) to move
up slightly.
Continuing violence
Unjust laws and repressive governments held back some countries
where there is genuine news diversity, such as Madagascar (97th),
Guinea (102nd), Kenya (109th), Chad (109th), Mauritania (127th)
and Ethiopia (131st).
Press freedom sharply deteriorated in some countries. Gambia, with
general mistrust between media and government in recent years, dropped
to 130th place because of the unpunished murder of journalist Deyda
Hydara and the increasingly hostile attitude to the media by President
Yahya Jammeh. In Sierra Leone (126th), political and police violence
against journalists worsened an already bad situation with the murder
of Harry Yansaneh, who replaced the jailed Paul Kamara as editor
of the daily paper For Di People.
Despite efforts by journalists to defend themselves in Somalia (149th),
the country is still one the continent's most dangerous places for
the media and has not managed to emerge from general disorder. Two
women journalists, the BBC's Kate Peyton and Duniya Muhiyadin
Nur, of the radio station HornAfrik, were killed during the
year in Mogadishu.
Pervasive violence and repression, backed by often absurd laws,
prevented any improvement in the ranking of the Democratic Republic
of Congo (146th). Zimbabwe (153rd) meanwhile continued downward,
with one of the continent's most ruthless regimes facing a courageous
but poorly-equipped independent press. In Eritrea, which at (166th)
is bottom-but-one of the world ranking, press freedom has not existed
since 18 September 2001, when the privately-owned media was abolished.
Reporters Without Borders compiled this Index of 167 countries
by asking its partner organizations (14 freedom of expression groups
from around the world) and its network of 130 correspondents, as
well as journalists, researchers, legal experts and human rights
activists, to answer 50 questions designed to assess a country's
level of press freedom. Some countries are not mentioned for lack
of information about them.
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