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Worldwide
Press Freedom Index 2006
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
October
23, 2006
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=19388
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North
Korea, Turkmenistan, Eritrea the worst violators of press freedom
France,
the United States and Japan slip further Mauritania and Haiti gain
much ground
New countries
have moved ahead of some Western democracies in the fifth annual
Reporters Without Borders Worldwide Press Freedom Index, issued
today, while the most repressive countries are still the same ones.
"Unfortunately
nothing has changed in the countries that are the worst predators
of press freedom," the organisation said, "and journalists
in North Korea, Eritrea, Turkmenistan, Cuba, Burma and China are
still risking their life or imprisonment for trying to keep us informed.
These situations are extremely serious and it is urgent that leaders
of these countries accept criticism and stop routinely cracking
down on the media so harshly.
"Each year new
countries in less-developed parts of the world move up the Index
to positions above some European countries or the United States.
This is good news and shows once again that, even though very poor,
countries can be very observant of freedom of expression. Meanwhile
the steady erosion of press freedom in the United States, France
and Japan is extremely alarming," Reporters Without Borders
said.
The three worst
violators of free expression - North Korea, bottom of the Index
at 168th place, Turkmenistan (167th) and Eritrea (166th) - have
clamped down further. The torture death of Turkmenistan journalist
Ogulsapar Muradova shows that the country’s leader, "President-for-Life"
Separmurad Nyazov, is willing to use extreme violence against those
who dare to criticise him. Reporters Without Borders is also extremely
concerned about a number of Eritrean journalists who have been imprisoned
in secret for more than five years. The all-powerful North Korean
leader, Kim Jong-il, also continues to totally control the media.
Northern European
countries once again come top of the Index, with no recorded censorship,
threats, intimidation or physical reprisals in Finland, Ireland,
Iceland and the Netherlands, which all share first place.
Deterioration
in the United States and Japan, with France also slipping
The
United States (53rd) has fallen nine places since last year, after
being in 17th position in the first year of the Index, in 2002.
Relations between the media and the Bush administration sharply
deteriorated after the president used the pretext of "national
security" to regard as suspicious any journalist who questioned
his "war on terrorism." The zeal of federal courts which,
unlike those in 33 US states, refuse to recognise the media’s right
not to reveal its sources, even threatens journalists whose investigations
have no connection at all with terrorism.
Freelance journalist
and blogger Josh Wolf was imprisoned when he refused to hand over
his video archives. Sudanese cameraman Sami al-Haj, who works for
the pan-Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera, has been held without trial
since June 2002 at the US military base at Guantanamo, and Associated
Press photographer Bilal Hussein has been held by US authorities
in Iraq since April this year.
France (35th)
slipped five places during the past year, to make a loss of 24 places
in five years. The increase in searches of media offices and journalists’
homes is very worrying for media organisations and trade unions.
Autumn 2005 was an especially bad time for French journalists, several
of whom were physically attacked or threatened during a trade union
dispute involving privatisation of the Corsican firm SNCM and during
violent demonstrations in French city suburbs in November.
Rising nationalism
and the system of exclusive press clubs (kishas) threatened democratic
gains in Japan, which fell 14 places to 51st. The newspaper Nihon
Keizai was firebombed and several journalists phsyically attacked
by far-right activists (uyoku).
Fallout from
the row over the "Mohammed cartoons"
Denmark
(19th) dropped from joint first place because of serious threats
against the authors of the Mohammed cartoons published there in
autumn 2005. For the first time in recent years in a country that
is very observant of civil liberties, journalists had to have police
protection due to threats against them because of their work.
Yemen (149th)
slipped four places, mainly because of the arrest of several journalists
and closure of newspapers that reprinted the cartoons. Journalists
were harassed for the same reason in Algeria (126th), Jordan (109th),
Indonesia (103rd) and India (105th).
But except for
Yemen and Saudi Arabia (161st), all the Arab peninsula countries
considerably improved their rank. Kuwait (73rd) kept its place at
the top of the group, just ahead of the United Arab Emirates (77th)
and Qatar (80th).
Newcomers
to the top ranks
Two
countries moved into the Index’s top 20 for the first time. Bolivia
(16th) was best-placed among less-developed countries and during
the year its journalists enjoyed the same level of freedom as colleagues
in Canada or Austria. Bosnia-Herzegovina (19th) continued its gradual
rise up the Index since the end of the war in ex-Yugoslavia and
is now placed above its European Union member-state neighbours Greece
(32nd) and Italy (40th).
Ghana (34th)
rose 32 places to become fourth in Africa behind the continent’s
three traditional leaders - Benin (23rd), Namibia (26th) and Mauritius
(32nd). Economic conditions are still difficult for the Ghanaian
media but it is no longer threatened by the authorities.
Panama (39th)
is enjoying political peace which has helped the growth of a free
and vigorous media and the country moved up 27 places over the year.
War, the
destroyer of press freedom
Lebanon
has fallen from 56th to 107th place in five years, as the country’s
media continues to suffer from the region’s poisonous political
atmosphere, with a series of bomb attacks in 2005 and Israeli military
attacks this year. The Lebanese media - some of the freest and most
experienced in the Arab world - desperately need peace and guarantees
of security. The inability of the Palestinian Authority (134th)
to maintain stability in its territories and the behaviour of Israel
(135th) outside its borders seriously threaten freedom of expression
in the Middle East.
Things are much
the same in Sri Lanka, which ranked 51st in 2002, when there was
peace, but has now sunk to 141st because fighting between government
and rebel forces has resumed in earnest. Dozens of Tamil journalists
have been physically attacked after being accused by one side or
the other of being biased against them.
Press freedom
in Nepal (159th) has shifted according to the state of the fighting
that has disrupted the country for several years. The "democatic
revolution" and the revolt against the monarchy in April this
year led immediately to more basic freedoms and the country should
gain a lot of ground in next year’s Index.
Welcome changes
of regime
Changes
of ruler are sometimes good for press freeedom, as in the case of
Haiti, which has risen from 125th to 87th place in two years after
the flight into exile of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in early
2004. Several murders of journalists remain unpunished but violence
against the media has abated.
Togo (66th)
has risen 29 places since the death of President Gnassingbe Eyadema
in February 2005, the accession to power of his son and internationally-backed
efforts to make peace with the opposition.
A coup in Mauritania
in August 2005 ended the heavy censorship of the local media and
the country has risen to 77th position after being 138th in 2004,
one of the biggest improvements in the Index.
Reporters Without
Borders compiled the Index by asking the 14 freedom of expression
organisations that are its partners worldwide, its network of 130
correspondents, as well as journalists, researchers, jurists and
human rights activists, to answer 50 questions about press freedom
in their countries. The Index covers 168 nations. Others were not
included for lack of data about them.
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