Source: Reporters Without
Borders
At least 81
journalists were killed in 2006 in 21 countries while doing their job or for
expressing their opinion, the highest annual toll since 1994, when 103 died
(half of them in the Rwanda genocide, about 20 in the Algerian civil
war and a dozen in former Yugoslavia). 32 media assistants
(fixers, drivers, translators, technicians, security staff) were also killed
2006 (only five in 2005).
In 2006
·
81 journalists and
32 media assistants were killed
·
at least 871 were
arrested
·
1,472 physically
attacked or threatened
·
56 kidnapped
·
and 912 media
outlets censored
In
2005:
·
63 journalists and 5
media assistants were killed
·
at least 807 were
arrested
·
1,308 physically
attacked or threatened
·
and 1,006 media
outlets censored
Iraq was the world's most
dangerous country for the media for the fourth year running, with 64 journalists
and media assistants killed. Since fighting began in 2003, 139 journalists have
been killed there, more than twice the number in the 20-year Vietnam War (63
killed between 1955 and 1975). About 90% of the victims were Iraqis.
Investigations were very rare and none were completed. Unlike other
organisations, Reporters Without Borders includes journalists in its death count
only when it is certain that their deaths are linked to their work as
journalists. Dozens of other cases have not been included because investigators
have not yet determined the motives or because it is clear that they were not
related to the issue of press freedom.
The second most
dangerous country was Mexico,
which also moved ahead of Colombia as Latin
America's deadliest place for the media. Nine journalists were
killed there in 2006 because they were investigating drug trafficking or
reporting on violent social unrest. US cameraman Brad Will was shot dead in late
October in turbulent Oaxaca state, where strikes often degenerated
into armed clashes, and other journalists were injured
there.
The body of journalist
Enrique Pera Quintanilla, editor of the monthly Dos Caras, una verdad, was found
by a roadside in the northern state of Chihuahua in August. The paper specialised in
reporting on unsolved murders and drug trafficking.
The situation in The
Philippines was grim too, with six journalists killed (compared with seven in
2005). Fernando Batul, a commentator with the radio station dyPR, was shot dead
in late May as he was going to work on Palawan Island, southwest of Manila. The authorities said he was killed
because he had criticised a brutal policeman, who was subsequently arrested and
will shortly be tried. The March 2005 killers of anti-corruption columnist
Marlene Esperat were jailed for life. But those punished were only triggermen
and those who ordered the killings are still walking free. However, in a country
where impunity is the rule, the trial and sentences were a good
precedent.
Three journalists were
killed in Russia, making 21 since President
Vladimir Putin came to power in March 2000. The murder in October of reporter
Anna Politkovskaya, of the weekly Novaya Gazeta and a Chechnya expert,
was a reminder that even the best-known journalists with major international
support do not escape such deadly violence. Pressed by democratic countries to
find and punish the culprits, the government has assigned a team of 150
detectives to the case.
Press freedom shrank
further in neighbouring Turkmenistan, with the crackdown on
independent media reaching a peak in September when the family of Radio Free
Europe correspondent Ogulsapar Muradova announced she had died in prison, three
months after being jailed. Despite repeated demands by the European Union, the
authorities did not investigate her death. In Lebanon, a photographer and a TV technician were
killed by Israeli bombing during the war with Israel. A dozen
journalists were injured or wounded during the fighting in the
summer.
Violent election
clashes
Over 1,400 physical
attacks or threats were recorded by Reporters Without Borders in 2006, which was
another record. Many of them were during election campaigns in various
countries.
Attacks on journalists
in Bangladesh, already routine, became
daily at the end of the year, a few weeks before key parliamentary elections,
and were carried out by security forces and political party
supporters.
A dozen countries in
the Americas held important national
elections during the year. Reporters Without Borders had registered more than a
dozen physical attacks on journalists and another dozen threats to them in
Peru by early March, a month before
presidential elections,. In Brazil, a daily paper's offices were ransacked on
election day by supporters of a local politician in the southern town of
Marilia.
Supporters of the two
main presidential candidates in the Democratic Republic of Congo - outgoing
President Joseph Kabila and his rival Jean-Pierre Bemba - regularly attacked
journalists they accused of sympathising with the "enemy camp." A visiting
foreign reporter was deported in both Uganda and Ethiopia at
election time.
Belarus cracked down on
journalists and regime opponents a few days after President Alexander
Lukashenko's reelection in March, and a dozen local and foreign reporters were
physically attacked, including Olga Ulevich, Russian correspondent of the
newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda, whose nose was broken when plainclothes police
beat her up.
Censorship and arrests
still very common
Cases of censorship
were slightly down - 912 against 1,006 in 2005, when Nepal had the
worst record. The ceasefire there in mid-2006 gave the media a break, with the
release of imprisoned journalists and many local radio stations able to freely
broadcast again.
Thailand recorded the most
cases of censorship. After a military coup in September, more than 300 community
radio stations were shut down along with several Internet websites. Things
returned to normal after a few weeks.
It was impossible to
get exact information on censorship in China, Burma and North Korea,
countries where blanket measures were taken against the media, affecting dozens
and even hundreds of outlets at the same time.
The Internet was
tightly controlled in some countries. Reporters Without Borders issued a list in
November of 13 "enemies of the Internet" (Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, North
Korea, Saudi
Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Vietnam).
Bloggers and
cyber-dissidents in these countries were regularly thrown into prison for
expressing their opinions online. Websites were closed down, made inaccessible
or filtered and discussion forums had especially critical messages
deleted.
About 30 bloggers were
arrested during the year and held for several weeks, notably in
China, Iran and Syria. Egypt appeared
for the first time on the "enemies of the Internet" list for its growing
crackdown on bloggers who criticised Islam or President Hosni
Mubarak.
At least 871 media
workers were detained around the world in 2006, some for just a few hours and
others sentenced to many years in prison.
The jailing in China
of Zhao Yan (for three years) and Ching Cheong (for five), both of them working
for foreign media, drew strong international protests. The appeals against their
sentences were not even heard by a court, depriving them of a chance to defend
themselves. The death of Turkmenistan's "President-for-Life"
Separmurad Nyazov in December could end the repression of journalists and human
rights activists. Two of them, Annakurban Amanklychev and Sapardurdy Khajiev,
were given prison sentences of six and seven years in June for helping a foreign
journalist doing a report on the country. Burma's famous
journalist and pro-democracy activist, Win Tin, began his 18th year in prison.
He was awarded the 2006 Reporters Without Borders - Fondation de France prize
for his fight for freedom of expression.
An extra worry:
journalists being kidnapped
For the first time,
Reporters Without Borders recorded in detail the number of journalists kidnapped
around the world.
At least 56 were
kidnapped in 2006 in a dozen countries. The two riskiest places were
Iraq, where 17 were seized, and the
Gaza Strip, where six were kidnapped. All those seized in the Palestinian Territories were freed, but six in Iraq were
executed by their captors.
Reporters Without
Borders met Iraqi President Jalal Talabani at the end of the year and urged him
to put a stop to such incidents. A mission also went to Gaza to ask Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas and leaders of the main Palestinian factions to see that
their supporters and the general population did not interfere with media
workers.
Click here to download the
press freedom round-up 2006