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`Attacks on the Press in 2007': A Survey That Needs To Be Corrected

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  • `Attacks on the Press in 2007': A Survey That Needs To Be Corrected

    Aztag Daily, Lebanon
    Feb 27 2008


    `Attacks on the Press in 2007': A Survey That Needs To Be Corrected

    By Vahram Emiyan
    Translated from Armenian by Dikranouhi Kusbegian


    The Committee to Protect Journalists published its annual worldwide
    survey titled `Attacks on the Press in 2007'. The 351 page book
    encloses all the killings, convictions, kidnappings and assaults of
    or committed against journalists all around the world in the year
    2007.
    The Committee to Protect Journalists was founded in 1981 by a group
    of American journalists. It is an independent, non-profit
    organization based in New York.
    According to the CPJ survey, the number of journalists killed in
    2007 has increased to 65 (it was 42 in 1992). Of those 72.9 percent
    have been murdered and 17.3 percent have been killed in crossfire.
    Between 1992 and 2007, the highest number of killings has occurred in
    Iraq (125) followed by Algeria (60) and Russia (47). 30.3 percent of
    the killings were committed by political groups, 18.5 percent by
    government officials and 11.2 percent by criminal groups. 85.7
    percent of the above mentioned killings have gone unpunished.
    As for the imprisonment of reporters, in 2007 China has had the
    highest ranking (29) followed by Cuba (24), Eritrea (14), Iran (12),
    and Azerbaijan (9). 57 percent of the imprisoned reporters have been
    accused of anti-state behavior. Of those 51 percent work in written
    press, 39 percent in internet reporting, 6 percent for TV stations
    and 4 percent for radio stations.
    In the preface, CNN's chief international correspondent and a CPJ
    board member Christiane Amanpour states that crime is a horrific
    reality facing independent reporters around the world. She says that
    7 out of 10 reporters have been targeted, chased and then shot or
    stabbed.
    Mentioning Anna Politkovskaya, the Russian investigative journalist
    who was shot in Russia on October 27, 2006, Amanpour stated that
    sometimes killings aim to send a message. Amanpour quots from
    Politkovskaya's friend and family lawyer saying: `When you kill, when
    you silence, the bravest journalist, it makes all the others think
    twice'.
    According to Amanpour, impunity is the biggest threat facing
    reporters today: `Murder, after all, is the ultimate form of
    censorship', she added.
    In the introduction of the book, CPJ's executive director Joel Simon
    writes that in repressive societies journalists suffer from `too much
    government: smothering, self-serving, and intrusive governments' that
    try to limit the boundaries of dissent. On the other hand, Simon
    added that the other threat that reporters face is `too little
    government' and mentions Iraq, Somalia, Gaza, and the tribal areas of
    Pakistan, where the widespread lawlessness leaves journalists to face
    the threat of the military factions there.
    Speaking of Iraq, Simon mentions that since the March 2003 US
    invasion, more than 170 journalists and media support workers have
    been killed, making the country a killing field for reporters. She
    explains that immediately after the ouster of Saddam Hussein, the
    Iraqi press grew rapidly; however, due to the absence of a
    functioning government to establish the rule of law, reporters were
    targeted by the militants, who accused them of partisanship and
    cooperation with Western media outlets.
    Simon also stated that the governments are often indifferent to the
    violence against the press, because they benefit from the
    self-censorship it provides. Simon writes that journalists seem to be
    trapped between `periods when powerful governments suppress the media
    and periods when weak governments are unable to enforce the law'. `If
    journalists are to work freely, we must confront with equal force
    both categories of abusers: governments that do too much, and those
    that do too little', she concludes.
    Nina Ognianova, the program coordinator for Europe and Central Asia,
    talks of `extremism' as an evolving and expanding term in Russian
    law. She writes that in the past few years the Russian parliament has
    extremely limited the `boundaries of acceptable reporting by
    redefining the laws against extremism'. At present, criticizing state
    officials and giving air to or reporting about dissenting views are
    considered to be outside the limits of permissible journalism. `In
    pursuing this tactic - rewriting laws to restrict critical commentary
    - Russia has taken a regrettable lead in the region', writes
    Ognianova and explains that following Russia's example Uzbekistan has
    rewritten laws to limit the activities of foreign media, and
    Tajikistan has made much of the internet commentary illegal.
    Following Nina Ognianova's introduction, the book uncovers the 2007
    attacks against press in Eurasian countries like Azerbaijan, Belarus,
    Georgia, Russia and Ukraine as well as related incidences that have
    taken place in countries like France, Spain, Germany and Switzerland.
    It was interesting to see that there was no mention of Armenia in
    this section. Another interesting fact to note is that Turkey was
    classified among the Middle Eastern countries and not as a European
    country, as it generally is.

    Azerbeijan

    The CPJ survey states that `ignoring international
    opinion, the authoritarian government of president Ilham Aliyev
    clamped down on opposition and became the fifth-leading jailer of
    journalists'; the CPJ ranks Azerbaijan as ` one of the worst
    backsliders on press freedom'.
    The survey explains that in the implementation of that repressive
    policy, Aliyev and his government were driven by the empowerment that
    country's growing energy profits have provided as well as by the fear
    of a `color' revolution of the kind that toppled governments in the
    region not so long ago. Following the example of Russia, the region's
    leading power, Azeri officials ignored the continuous criticism of
    their systematic persecution of the media, being confident that the
    West's need for oil will eventually outweigh its worries concerning
    human rights.
    CPJ states that the use of the criminal defamation charges, the
    government's favorite method for silencing critics, has been widely
    criticized. The survey reveals that 9 out of 5 reporters were
    convicted of criminal defamation charges. In four of those cases the
    criminal charges were pressed by government officials. The CPJ also
    talks about the situation in Nakhichevan stating that official
    harassment and lawlessness have made it very difficult for
    independent journalists to work there.

    Turkey

    Speaking of the attacks made on Turkish journalists, the
    CPJ's survey talks in details about the `Agos' Armenian bilingual
    weekly's chief editor Hrant Dink's case; the prosecution and the
    charges he faced before his murder, his murder and the court
    processes following his death. The survey points that Dink's murder
    marked a difficult year for Turkey during which journalists were
    often targeted for criminal prosecutions and government censorship.
    Looking into the Turkish press freedom group's (BIA) documentation,
    the survey states that dozens of criminal cases were brought against
    `print and broadcast journalists in 2007 under controversial penal
    code provisions that criminalize expression deemed insulting to the
    Turkish identity, that represent pro-Kurdish political sentiments, or
    that criticize the military and state institutions'. There is also a
    mention of Dink's son, who was also imprisoned under the above
    mentioned controversial article 301 for reprinting one of his
    father's interviews. `In effect, the son was prosecuted for the
    father's supposed offense', states the survey.
    According to `Attacks on the Press in 2007' survey, the BIA
    documents reveal that in the first half of the year 2007 100 cases
    were filed against journalists under article 301.
    The survey also talks of the recurrence of the violations committed
    by the Turkish police against journalists in 2007. The courts
    continued to close down newspapers for publishing pro-Kurdish titles
    and articles of politically controversial issues.
    While reading the Turkish section of the survey; however, we come
    across a disturbing fact. Indeed, while talking about Hrant Dink's
    murder, the authors of the survey mention that he was killed for
    writing about `the mass murder of the Armenians'. A few paragraphs
    later we read about just `Armenian killings'. We rightfully ask: how
    can an organization that advocates freedom of the press and
    protection of journalists accomplish its founding goal in Turkey as
    it avoids mentioning the Armenian Genocide, thus making a compromise
    in favor of the Turkish government's denialist policy. The whole
    world knows that Hrant Dink was killed because he wrote about the
    Armenian Genocide and the misrepresentation of that well known fact
    not only raises questions about the seriousness of the survey and the
    information it encloses, but also about the credibility of the
    organization behind it.
    Armenians all around the world should contact the Committee to
    Protect Journalists and demand a correction of that absurd mistake.
    The author of this article himself contacted the organization whose
    address is: The Committee to Protect Journalists, 330 Seventh Avenue,
    11th Fl., New York 10001. Tel.: (212) 465-1004. Fax: (212) 465-9568.
    Email: [email protected]
    For more information about the organization visit its official
    website at www.cpj.org
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