Media freedom suffered a “drastic decline” worldwide last year in part because of extremist groups such as the Islamic State and Boko Haram, the watchdog group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said in its annual evaluation released yesterday.
“There has been an overall deterioration linked to very different factors, with information wars, and action by non-state groups acting like news despots,” RSF director-general Christophe Deloire said.
The Paris-based group’s 2015 World Press Freedom Index stated that there were 3,719 violations of freedom of information in 180 countries last year — 8 percent more than a year earlier.
INFORMATION WAR
All parties in conflicts raging in the Middle East and Ukraine were waging “a fearsome information war” where media personnel were directly targeted to be killed, captured or pressured to relay propaganda, the watchdog said.
The Islamic State group active in Syria and Iraq, Boko Haram in northern Nigeria and Cameroon, and criminal organizations in Italy and Latin America all used “fear and reprisals to silence journalists and bloggers who dare to investigate or refuse to act as their mouthpieces,” the RSF said.
North Africa and the Middle East contained notable “black holes” in which “entire regions are controlled by non-state groups in which independent information simply does not exist,” the group said.
“The criminalization of blasphemy endangers freedom of information in around half of the world’s countries,” the report said, adding that religious extremists sometimes also go after journalists or bloggers they believe do not sufficiently respect their god or prophet.
RSF’s ranking put Iran, China, Syria and North Korea among the countries with the very worst levels of press freedom out of the 180 evaluated.
Repression of journalists in Ukraine during its uprising against its pro-Kremlin president early last year, and in Turkey during anti-government demonstrations earned both spots in the bottom quarter of the table.
“Police misconduct” during the Occupy Central protests in Hong Kong earned that territory a slide to 70th position.
TOP RANKED
The best-rated nations were northern European states such as Finland, Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden, with New Zealand, Canada and Jamaica also making the top 10.
The US ranked 49 — three spots lower than in the previous report — in part because of what RSF said was the US government’s “war on information” against WikiLeaks and others.
In South America, Venezuela stood out with a 20-notch fall to a ranking of 137 due to the National Bolivarian Guard opening fire on clearly identified journalists during demonstrations.
Libya dropped 17 places to 154 because of the national chaos that has seen seven journalists murdered and 37 kidnapped.
Russia slipped to the 152nd spot after introducing “another string of draconian laws,” Web site blocking and the extinction of independent media.
“Press freedom ... is in retreat on all five continents,” RSF said, claiming its indicators were “incontestable.”
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