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Updated
list of predators of press freedom
Reporters Sans Frontiers
May 02, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=26790
Reporters Without Borders
is today issuing an updated of list of its "predators of press
freedom" for World Press Freedom Day.
For the past seven years
Reporters Without Borders has exposed the world's "predators
of press freedom" - men and women who directly attack
journalists or order others to. Most are top-level politicians (including
presidents, prime ministers and kings) but they also include militia
chiefs, leaders of armed groups and drug-traffickers. They usually
answer to no one for their serious attacks on freedom of expression.
Failure to punish them is one of the greatest threats to the media
today.
There are 39 "predators
of press freedom" this year. Five have disappeared from the
previous list. Fidel Castro is one of them, as the "lider
maximo" has definitively transferred power to his brother
Raúl. Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf lost February's
parliamentary elections and, in the process, his ability to harm
press freedom. In Ethiopia, the situation seems to have stabilized
and imprisoned journalists have been released, so Prime Minister
Meles Zenawi has been taken off the list. The same goes for Swaziland's
King Mswati III, who has not committed any serious press freedom
violation for several years. Finally, Young Patriots leader Charles
Blé Goudé in Côte d'Ivoire has stopped
calling for violence against foreign journalists or opposition journalists.
But 10 new predators
have entered the list. In the Palestinian Territories, the armed
wing of Hamas in Gaza and the Palestinian Authority's security
forces in the West Bank were guilty of serious press freedom violations.
Each faction systematically hounded journalists suspecting of siding
with the other camp.
The Israel Defence Forces
were added to the list after they began again to target journalists
covering their incursions into the Palestinian Territories. A Palestinian
cameraman working for Reuters was killed in April by a shell fired
from an Israeli tank. In July 2007, a cameraman lost the use of
both legs after being fired on by an Israeli soldier as he lay on
the ground.
Gurbangouly Berdymukhammedov,
who has been president of Turkmenistan for more than a year, did
not keep his promise to carry out democratic reforms. The media
continue to be under the government's absolute control and
prisoners of conscience have not been released.
Press freedom has many
enemies in Somalia. The armed group Al-Shabaab, Mogadishu governor
and mayor Mohamed Dhere and national security agency director Mohamed
Warsame Darwish are among those who are particularly brutal in the
way they treat journalists.
In Sri Lanka, the president's
brother, defence minister Gotabhaya Rajapakse, often voices virulent
attacks on the press, contributing to the appalling climate that
prevails there. In the north of the country, Velupillai Prabhakaran,
the long-time leader of the Tamil Tiger rebels, continues to intimidate
journalists who criticize his movement.
Finally, political calm
has returned in Nepal, but a few radical armed groups make life
hell for the press, especially in the south. At least 90 journalists
were physically attacked, threatened or force to flee their town
as a result of threat from armed militants.
AFRICA
Equatorial Guinea
Teodoro Obiang Nguema, President
Everything is peaceful
in President Obiang Nguema's oil-rich "Kuwait of Africa,"
where the state radio calls him the country's "god."
He is regularly elected by just under 100% of the vote and has absolute
control. No privately-owned media is allowed except for a semi-clandestine
opposition newsletter regularly harassed by the regime.
The control
of the economy by the president and his family goes with a suffocating
personality cult. The few local journalists freelancing for the
foreign media are closely watched. The regime says the lack of democracy
is because of "poverty" and not intolerance of those
who criticise Obiang Nguema's power "to kill someone
without being punished or going to hell," as the state radio
puts it.
Eritrea
Issaias Afeworki, President
The authoritarian President
Afeworki officially suspended basic freedoms in 2001 after dissidents
in the ruling party called for democracy. Every hint of opposition
is described as "treason." The privately-owned media
has been shut down and only the state media are allowed, preaching
a rigid line. The Red Sea country has become a prison, ruled harshly
by an ultra-nationalist group around Afeworki.
At least 16
journalists have vanished into Eritrea's 314 prisons. Four
of them, including distinguished playwright Fessehaye ("Joshua")
Yohannes, have reportedly died in the harsh and cruel conditions.
The government first called the journalists common-law prisoners,
then spies and then simply denied their existence.
Gambia
Yahya Jammeh, President
Jammeh, a former army sergeant who seized power in 1994 when he
was only 29, boasts of his contempt for journalists. He has cracked
down on all critics through his personal guard and secret police,
with arrests, threats and bomb attacks against the media. But journalists,
grouped in a trade union, fought back until the December 2004 murder
of Deyda Hydara, editor of the newspaper The Point and former head
of the union. The country's media has been cowed since then
and the killers have not been arrested or punished.
Journalists are illegally
arrested on the slightest pretext at the president's whim,
even though Gambia is the headquarters of the African Commission
on Human and People's Rights. He continues to insist that
"if I want to shut down a newspaper, I will."
Nigeria
State Security Service (SSS)
This fearsome organization at the disposal of the president does
the government's dirty work, typically ransacking media offices,
making illegal arrests and arbitrarily throwing people in prison.
It routinely denies arresting journalists despite many witnesses
to the fact.
It is the successor to
the Nigerian Security Organisation (NSO), the secret police of the
military dictatorships in the 1970s and 1980s, and was set up in
1986 soon after Gen. Ibrahim Babangida seized power. Civilian rule
was restored in 1999 but the SSS continues to obey the president's
orders. The media is bold and vigorous but the SSS is sometimes
sent to intimidate journalists with raids, beatings and tough interrogations.
Rwanda
Paul Kagame, President
The provisions in the national constitution for press freedom are
just empty words for President Paul Kagame, as he tolerates no embarrassing
questions at press conferences, frequently insults independent journalists
and dismisses all critical media outlets as "Radio Mille Collines,"
the former genocidal radio station.
The government attacks
any journalist, local or foreign, who puts out news it does not
like or which violates the taboos of the society built by the Rwandan
Patriotic Front (FPR), which came to power after overthrowing the
genocidal Hutu regime and ending its massacres.
A foreign journalist
was deported in 2006, a newspaper editor beaten up and another heavily
sanctioned for a political commentary. Local journalists flee into
exile each year, unable to work in such stifling conditions. This
doesn't bother Kagame, who calls them "mercenaries"
and "down-and-outs."
Somalia
Al-Shabaab armed group
Initially an armed wing of the Islamic Courts, which were ousted
from Mogadishu by government troops and the Ethiopian army in December
2006, this group of "young combatants" has gradually
emerged as the most fearsome subversive machine operating in Somalia.
Rejecting the "politicking" of the Islamist leaders
exiled in Eritrea, it has broken away and organises murderous attacks
on the transitional government and its allies.
It also supervises a
campaign of terror and targeted murders against leading members
of Somali civil society who are, it says, guilty of serving the
interests of the "Crusaders." Dozens of teachers, academics,
doctors and at least three journalists have been killed by these
"Young Mujahideen," who often use innocent-looking teenagers
as hit-men.
Somalia
Mohamed Dhere, Mogadishu governor and mayor, and Mohamed Warsame
Darwish, head of national security agency
Mohamed Omar Habeb, a
former warlord better known as "Mohamed Dhere," and
intelligence chief Mohamed Warsame Darwish are in charge of security
in Mogadishu. As such, they are the leading instigators of the heavy-handed
raids, arbitrary arrests and deliberately shootings used to harass
the few journalists still operating in Somalia, especially when
the journalists expose abuses by the military or interview government
opponents. Coordinating their activities with the commander of the
Ethiopian forces in Somalia, Gen. Gabre Heard, they often exceed
the orders they get from a civilian government that proclaims its
commitment to press freedom but has little power. As they have carte
blanche to combat the Islamist rebels, they see press freedom as
a danger. And they are free to ignore the law.
Zimbabwe
Robert Mugabe, President
The octogenarian Mugabe,
one of world's oldest rulers, was hailed when he came to power
as a "liberator" comparable with Nelson Mandela but
these days he tolerates no criticism. His regime's "slum
clearance" targets opposition strongholds and made 700,000
people homeless in 2005, but he describes it as a public health
operation. The 2002 information law introduced strict monitoring
of the media and is used to combat supposed foreign subversion.
The 2003 ban on the country's most popular newspaper, the
Daily News, was described by Mugabe as simply a bureaucratic move.
Mugabe orders the arrest
of local and foreign journalists, who he accuses of spying because
they do not obey the regime's strict rules, and uses threats
and legal harassment in a bid to silence them. Zimbawean radio stations
based abroad are jammed, using Chinese equipment, and the former
"breadbasket" of southern Africa is now one of the continent's
most repressive countries.
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