Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Press freedom in US slips

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Press freedom in US slips

    Press freedom in US slips
    24/10/2006 13:18 - (SA)

    Paris - North Korea is the worst violator of press freedom while
    journalists in Finland, Ireland, Iceland and the Netherlands enjoy the
    most liberty, according to a new index released this week by Reporters
    Without Borders.

    South Africa came in at No. 44, ahead of the United States at No. 53 -
    a spot it shared with Croatia, Botswana and Tonga. Russia came in at
    No. 147. The Paris-based media advocacy group relied on its network
    of 130 correspondents, plus journalists, legal experts and human
    rights activists, to come up with the ranking.

    Worst offenders The worst offenders, in order, were North Korea,
    Turkmenistan, Eritrea, Cuba, Burma, China, Iran and Saudi Arabia,
    Reporters Without Borders said in a statement.

    "Unfortunately, nothing has changed in the countries that are the
    worst predators of press freedom, and journalists in North Korea,
    Eritrea, Turkmenistan, Cuba, Burma and China are still risking their
    life or imprisonment for trying to keep us informed," the organisation
    said.

    In the country at the bottom of the list, "the all-powerful North
    Korean leader, Kim Jong Il, also continues to totally control the
    media," the group said.

    US has steadily declined

    In the index's first year, 2002, the United States was in 17th place
    and has steadily declined since then.

    "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 report said.

    US press freedom is slipping even when terrorism is not at stake, the
    report said, citing the case of Joshua Wolf, a freelance video
    journalist jailed after he refused to turn over footage of a political
    protest to a grand jury. France fell back five places to No. 35,
    which it shared with Australia,

    Bulgaria and Mali, and Japan dropped 14 places to No. 51.

    Bolivia and Bosnia, meanwhile, moved into the top 20. Bolivia shared
    16th place with Austria and Canada, while Bosnia was in 19th place
    with Denmark, New Zealand and Trinidad and Tobago.

    Denmark suffers over cartoon threats

    Denmark, which shared first place last year, suffered a sharp loss of
    press freedom because of threats against the authors of the Prophet
    Muhammad cartoons that caused an uproar in September 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," the
    report said.

    Russia

    Among European nations, press freedom is worst in the ex-Soviet
    states, the group said.

    Media freedom in Russia - where award-winning investigative reporter
    Anna Politkovskaya was shot to death on October 7 in a suspected
    contract killing - has not improved, the report said.

    "Russia, which suffers from a basic lack of democracy, continues
    slowly but steadily dismantling the free media, with industrial groups
    close to President Vladimir Putin buying up nearly all independent
    media outlets and with passage of a law discouraging NGO activity," it
    said.
Working...
X