Attacks and censorship erode press freedom worldwide



CPJ; February 14, 2013



New York, February 14, 2013An unprecedented rise in the number of journalists killed and
imprisoned in the past year coupled with restrictive legislation and state
censorship is jeopardizing independent reporting in many countries, according to
Attacks on the Press, a yearly
assessment of global press freedom released today by the Committee to Protect
Journalists.

“When journalists are silenced, whether through violence or
laws, we all stand to lose because perpetrators are able to obscure misdeeds,
silence dissent, and disempower citizens,” said CPJ Deputy Director Robert
Mahoney. “The battle to control information is an assault on public
accountability that cannot go unchallenged. Governments must prosecute
perpetrators and stop those seeking to incapacitate public oversight by
blunting critical and probing reporting.”

Leading indicators featured in Attacks reveal a deteriorating environment for press freedom. In
2012, the number of journalists imprisoned worldwide reached a record high, a
trend driven primarily by terrorism and other anti-state charges levied against
critical reporters and editors. CPJ identified 232 journalists behind bars because of their work in 2012, an increase
of 53 from 2011 and the highest since the organization began the survey in
1990. CPJ research shows that over the past two decades, a journalist is killed
in the line of duty once every eight days. Seventy journalists lost their lives
in the line of duty in 2012, a 43 percent increase from 2011. More than 35 journalists
have gone missing.

To determine growing threats, the 2013 edition of Attacks also features CPJ’s new Risk List,
which identifies the 10 places where the organization documented the most significant
downward trends during 2012. Those trends included:

  • High murder rates and
    entrenched impunity in Pakistan, Somalia, and Brazil.
  • The use of restrictive laws
    to silence dissent in Ecuador, Turkey, and Russia.
  • The imprisonment of large
    numbers of journalists, typically on anti-state charges, to thwart
    critical reporting in Ethiopia, Turkey, Vietnam, Iran, and Syria.
  • An exceedingly high fatality rate in Syria,
    where journalists faced multiple risks from all sides in the conflict.

Attacks on the Press
exposes the aggressive efforts of state and non-state actors to silence
journalists, particularly those covering crime, corruption, politics, and
conflict,” said Mahoney. “The right to receive and impart information
transcends borders, and international and regional bodies have a key role to
play in upholding these principles, which are under attack.”   

A U.N.
plan
to strengthen international efforts to fight impunity and increase
journalist security around the world-which is being implemented with CPJ
support-aims to create safer conditions for journalists around the world. The
plan and a five-year-old
U.N. resolution
that calls for the protection of journalists in conflict zones require full implementation
in order to guarantee a free and safe press. U.N. member states must honor
their commitment beyond training programs, special appointments, and rhetoric,
while U.N. agencies should adopt practices to bring coordinated rapid responses
on the ground to the crises facing the press.
 

“Today, even as technology fuels a global communications
revolution, a range of governments are challenging the very concept of press
freedom, arguing that it is not a universal right at all but must be adapted to
national circumstances,” CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon wrote in
Attacks. “The basic consensus supporting
freedom of expression in international law is strong enough to push back firmly
against autocratic leaders who seek legal and political cover for their
restrictive policies.”

First published in 1986, Attacks on the Press is the
definitive annual assessment of the state of press freedom worldwide. The 2013
edition features up-to-the-minute analyses by CPJ and global experts on media conditions,
press freedom violations, and emerging threats in every corner of the world,
along with regional data and a snapshot of conditions in close to 60 countries.
Thematic essays in the book focus on the anti-press offensive by non-state
actors in Africa; the weakening of the inter-American human rights and press
freedom system; the looming media vacuum in Afghanistan; China’s relationship
with the foreign press; mobile security; self-censorship in Mexico; citizen
journalists in Syria; censorship by extremists on stories of religion; coverage
of oil in Africa; and the prospects of a global press freedom charter in times
of increasing challenges. An expanded
print
edition
with exclusive essays by leading journalists is published by
Bloomberg Press, an imprint of Wiley, and is available for purchase.


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