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World
Press Freedom Index 2009: Madagascar and Gabon fall, Horn sinks
deeper, Zimbabwe improves
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
October 20, 2009
See the 2009
world press freedom index here
The Horn was again the
African region with the most press freedom violations. Eritrea (175th),
where no independent media is tolerated and 30 journalists are in
prison (as many as in China or Iran but with a much smaller population),
was ranked last in the world for the third year running. Somalia
(164th), which is steadily being emptied of its journalists, was
the world's deadliest country for the media, with six journalists
killed between 1 January and 4 July.
This year confirmed that,
in some African countries, democracy rests on solid foundations
and respect for freedoms is guaranteed. But in other countries,
political crises and instability dealt harsh blows to the work of
journalists and news media.
In Madagascar (134th),
which plummeted 40 places, the media were caught in a confrontation
between ousted president Marc Ravalomanana and the president of
the High Transition Authority, Andry Rajoelina. Censorship, violent
attacks on media premises, disinformation and a young journalist's
death while covering a demonstration were the reasons for the island's
sharp fall in the index. In Gabon (129th), the media's work
was undermined by the news blackout about President Omar Bongo's
health which the authorities imposed in the run-up to his death
and the poisonous climate during the presidential election in August.
Congo (116th) fell 24
places in the index, mainly because of the mystery surrounding opposition
journalist Bruno Jacquet Ossébi's death and the harassment
of several foreign reporters during the 12 July presidential election.
The situation seemed relatively calm this year in Guinea (100th),
but the 28 September bloodshed in Conakry and the open threats against
journalists currently being voiced by the military are a source
of deep concern.
Some transitions were
less damaging for press freedom. Gen. Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz's
election as president in Mauritania (100th) went ahead without any
significant problem for the press even if a website editor's
imprisonment hurt the country's image. In Guinea-Bissau (92nd),
the assassinations in quick succession of the armed forces chief
of staff and President Joao Bernardo Vieira caused the temporary
suspension of some media and prompted some worried journalists to
flee the country, but the lasting impact was limited.
The countries with rampant
violence continue to languish in the bottom third of the rankings.
In Nigeria (135th) and Democratic Republic of Congo (146th), the
practice of journalism is punctuated by physical attacks and arbitrary
arrests. Two radio journalists were murdered in Bukavu, the capital
of DRC's eastern province of Sud-Kivu.
Rwanda (157th) continued
to fall as the authorities reinforced news control in the run-up
to the 2010 elections, temporarily suspending local and international
news media and sentencing journalists to jail terms. It is now almost
on a par with the "African Kuwait," Equatorial Guinea
(158th), where the foreign media's only local correspondent
spent four months in jail as a result of a defamation action.
Niger's President
Mamadou Tandja was in a close-run race with his Gambian counterpart,
Yahya Jammeh, for West Africa's worst ranking. It was taken
in the end by Niger (139th), which fell nine places, two below Gambia
(137th), which was again the victim of its president's intolerance
towards the media. This year, Jammeh sent six of the country's
most respected journalists to prison and then made insulting and
provocative comments about them in public.
In Zimbabwe (136th),
the press seems to be in the process of freeing itself from the
regime's vice-like grip. The situation was marred by former
journalist Jestina Mukoko's abduction and then imprisonment
for many weeks. But hopes have been buoyed by the new government
of national unity's announcement in the summer that the BBC
and CNN would be allowed to return and that the independent Daily
News would be able to resume publishing.
The same group of countries
lead the pack as in 2008. Ghana (27th), Mali (30th), South Africa
(33rd), Namibia (35th) and Cape Verde (44th) are all among the world's
top 50. Boosted by yet another democratic election in January 2009,
in which opposition candidate John Atta-Mills defeated the ruling
party's would-be successor to President John Kufuor, Ghana
took Africa's top position from Namibia, where a South African
journalist spend a night in police custody before being freed on
payment of two lots of bail.
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