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According to the survey, 89 countries are Free. Their 2.8 billioninh

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  • According to the survey, 89 countries are Free. Their 2.8 billioninh

    Times of India, India
    Dec 24 2004

    J&K enjoys more freedom than PoK: Survey
    CHIDANAND RAJGHATTA


    WASHINGTON: The Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir has a greater
    degree of freedom than Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, the think-tank
    Freedom House has said in a survey.

    In a significant pronouncement in the Freedom of the World 2005
    report, the think tank classifies PoK as "Not Free" compared to J&K's
    "Partly Free" status, thus diminishing military-ruled Pakistan's
    frequent charges of Indian oppression in J&K and calls for
    "self-determination" for the state.

    In fact, India, with a ranking of 2.5, is only country in South Asia
    that is classified as "Free." Pakistan at 5.5 is deemed "Not Free,"
    which would suggest its status is worse than that India's "Partly
    Free" J&K.

    Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal all rate better than Pakistan with
    their "Partly Free" status. The annual ranking is based on political
    rights and civil liberties, and Freedom House is evidently not
    impressed by Gen Musharraf's claims of democracy.

    In an assessment of what Freedom House considers "disputed
    territories," only northern Turkish Cyprus is rated "Free." J&K,
    along with Nagorno-Karabakh (disputed between Armenia and Azarbaijan)
    is rated partly free. PoK, Tibet, Israeli-occupied territories,
    Palestinian-occupied territories, Chechnya and Kosovo are considered
    "Not Free."

    According to the survey, 89 countries are Free. Their 2.8 billion
    inhabitants (44 percent of the world's population) enjoy a broad
    range of rights. Fifty-four countries representing 1.2 billion people
    (19 percent) are considered Partly Free. Political rights and civil
    liberties are more limited in these countries, in which corruption,
    dominant ruling parties, or, in some cases, ethnic or religious
    strife are often the norm.

    The survey finds that 49 countries are Not Free. The 2.4 billion
    inhabitants (37 percent) of these countries, nearly three-fifths of
    whom live in China, are denied most basic political rights and civil
    liberties. The worst rated countries include close US ally Saudi
    Arabia, Turkmenistan, Libya, North Korea, Cuba, Sudan, Syria and
    Burma.

    Most of Western Europe and the United States topped the freedom chart
    with a ranking of 1. India with its 2.5 ranking was in the company of
    Brazil, Philippines and Thailand, and below Greece, Japan, South
    Africa, Taiwan, South Korea and Israel among others.
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