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The Committee to Protect Journalists is marking World Press
Freedom Day, Saturday, May 3, by naming the World’s Worst Places to Be a
Journalist. The list of 10 places represents the full range of current
threats to press freedom.
At the top of the list is Iraq,
where nine journalists covering the U.S.-led war there were killed in
action during the first three weeks of hostilities, falling victim to
Iraqi or U.S. fire, land mines, or suicide bombers. Four other
journalists in Iraq died in accidents or from illness. A brutal
crackdown launched in Cuba
by Fidel Castro’s government put an unprecedented 28 journalists behind
bars in March, and they are serving lengthy prison terms of up to 27
years. During the last year, independent journalists in Vietnam
who dared to criticize the ruling Communist Party in print or on the
Internet were harassed, placed under heavy surveillance, or thrown in
jail. CPJ also placed Afghanistan,
Chechnya,
the
West Bank and Gaza, Eritrea,
Togo,
Colombia,
and Belarus
on the list of Worst Places to Be a Journalist.
“Many journalists
who report from these places have made the ultimate sacrifice; others
are in jail serving long sentences,” said CPJ acting director Joel
Simon. “But their colleagues persevere, confronting government
crackdowns, physical violence, harsh press laws, and indiscriminate
gunfire to bring us the news,” said Simon.
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IRAQ The U.S.-led war in Iraq has
exacted a heavy toll on those covering the conflict. Nine journalists
were killed in action during the first three weeks of hostilities by
Iraqi or U.S. fire, land mines, or suicide bombers. (Four others died in
accidents or from illness.) Several more were wounded, and two remain
missing. Those not in the line of fire encountered other hardships: U.S.
or Iraqi forces inside Iraq temporarily detained more than 24
journalists. While the bulk of the fighting appears finished, safety
conditions for journalists remain precarious: Banditry, gunfire, and
physical attacks will likely make Iraq a dangerous assignment for the
foreseeable future.
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CUBA In March, with international
attention focused on the war in Iraq, Cuban authorities launched a
sweeping crackdown on dissidents, including the island’s fledging
independent press. In all, 28 journalists were arrested, convicted
during one-day summary trials, sentenced to between 14 and 27 years in
prison, and dispersed to serve their sentences in the many jails of the
Cuban gulag.
The crackdown, while unprecedented in its scale, is
the culmination of years of repression and intimidation, including
jailings, forced exile, confiscation of property, suspension of phone
service, and orchestrated harassment by pro-government mobs. Cuban
journalists, who dictate and fax their stories about human rights
violations and petty corruption to their colleagues abroad, pose a
direct challenge to the information monopoly that the government of
President Fidel Castro Ruz maintains on the
island.
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VIETNAM During
the last year, authorities in Vietnam have intensified their repression
on independent writers and political dissidents. Those who publish news
or opinions that contradict the Communist Party line are harassed,
placed under heavy surveillance, or jailed. The government typically
accuses independent journalists of endangering national security and
treats even moderate criticism of the government or support for
democratic reform as treasonous offenses. Eight journalists are
currently languishing in Vietnam’s prisons or are under house arrest. In
recent months, local journalists have expressed fears of an even broader
crackdown following reports that authorities have compiled a nationwide
“blacklist” of writers and dissidents.
As independent journalists
increasingly turn to the Internet to distribute news or information
barred from the official media, the government has tightened already
strict regulations governing Internet content and intensified online
surveillance. Five of Vietnam’s imprisoned journalists were targeted for
online publishing—including Nguyen Khac Toan, who was sentenced in
December 2002 to 12 years in prison, one of the harshest sentences
handed down to a journalist in recent years. In mid-April, the official
army newspaper Quan Doi Nhan Dan published an editorial arguing
for additional controls on the Internet and more severe punishment of
those who circulate “reactionary and depraved content” online.
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AFGHANISTAN The
unchecked power of local warlords and weak rule of law make Afghanistan
an inhospitable environment for the press. Despite the new freedoms
enjoyed by the media after the ouster of the repressive Taliban regime,
journalists say it is impossible to write and speak freely because of
threats, physical intimidation, and assault. These abuses are often
committed by politicians and military commanders who use government
security forces to harass independent journalists.
Though
leaders of Afghanistan’s transitional administration—including President
Hamid Karzai—have publicly championed press freedom, they have not moved
aggressively to stop attacks against the press. In mid-March, for
example, a reporter working for the U.S.-funded Radio Liberty was
beaten, detained, and expelled from the western province of Herat on the
orders of local governor and powerful warlord Ismail Khan. In many
cases, journalists do not publicize such attacks and practice
self-censorship for fear of further reprisals. CPJ has documented
several instances where journalists have temporarily gone underground or
fled after receiving threats.
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CHECHNYA Journalists
in Chechnya endure physical violence, threats, and the everyday
brutalities of war. In the last decade, 18 journalists have been killed
there for their work. And today, only a handful are willing to risk
their lives by reporting from the region. Those who dare to go find
themselves caught in the middle of an intense propaganda war between the
Kremlin and Chechen rebels. Journalists working in Chechnya officially
are mostly confined to a military press center, where they receive
filtered information. Travel is only allowed with elaborate police
escorts, making independent reporting impossible. Others who cross into
Chechnya clandestinely to investigate human rights abuses and portray an
unsanctioned picture of the conflict face detention and physical attacks
from Russian forces. Foreign correspondents whose coverage of the region
is deemed anti-Russian are often denied visas or even blacklisted by the
Foreign Ministry. These policies have succeeded in the government’s goal
of preventing journalists from reporting on the war’s
devastation.
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THE WEST BANK AND
GAZA Indiscriminate gunfire from the Israeli army made the
occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip a treacherous beat. Three journalists
have been killed by Israeli gunfire there in the last 12 months,
including cameraman Nazeh Darwazeh, who was shot in the head at close
range by an Israeli soldier in April despite being well marked as a
member of the press. Israeli soldiers are rarely punished when they
shoot journalists.
Journalists operating near the front lines in
the West Bank and Gaza continue to face a variety of other obstacles. In
recent months, journalists have been wounded by Israeli military
strikes; the Israeli army has closed Palestinian radio stations; and
military checkpoints and a tough Israeli government policy limiting
press accreditation continue to hamper reporting. Militant Jewish
settlers, meanwhile, perpetrate violent attacks against journalists, and
Palestinian security forces and militias have physically assaulted,
threatened, and confiscated materials from
journalists.
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ERITREA Eritrea
has been Africa’s foremost jailer of journalists since September 2001,
when the government banned the entire private press and detained
independent reporters. Eighteen journalists are now in secret jails
across the tiny Red Sea nation. An active member of the coalition that
backed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, President Isaias Afewerki
variously accuses independent journalists of terrorist ties, espionage,
and “endangering national unity.” Authorities continue to insist that
the private press also operated without proper licenses, and that
independent journalists routinely evaded the compulsory National Service
Program.
The ruling party has a firm grip on the state media,
whose employees face censorship and also practice self-censorship.
Afewerki has been unfazed by persistent international denunciation of
his human rights record and continues to dismiss foreign critics as
enemies of Eritrea.
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TOGO Since the government passed a
harsh press law in January 2000, Togo has become one of the worst places
to practice journalism in sub-Saharan Africa. In late March 2003, the
government temporarily banned all foreign correspondents in the country
from working in reprisal for the press’s failure to cover the opening of
a conference in the capital, Lomé, on African elections. Several
journalists have been imprisoned during the last three years for press
offenses; others have gone into hiding to avoid arrest. At the order of
the Interior Ministry, police routinely seize entire editions of
newspapers from printing facilities. Authorities have closed media
outlets, such as the independent stations Radio Victoire and Tropik FM,
blocked news Web sites, and jammed the frequencies of broadcasters
critical of President Gnassingbé Eyadéma or his ruling Rassemblement du
Peuple Togolais. In September 2002, the Togolese Parliament passed a new
Press Code amendment that drastically increases the penalties for press
offenses. A journalist can now be imprisoned for up to five years and
fined US$8,000 for “insulting the Head of
State.”
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COLOMBIA The
40-year-old Colombian civil war has taken a brutal toll on the country’s
press: More than 30 journalists have been killed in the last decade
because of their work, and they continue to be targeted. CPJ is
investigating the murders of two journalists who were killed last week,
possibly to silence them. In addition, Luis Eduardo Alfonso, a reporter
with Radio Meridiano-70, was murdered on March 18, 2003, after
criticizing the paramilitaries, which are fighting, along with
government forces, against leftist guerrillas.
Meanwhile, the
government’s lack of control over vast areas of the country makes
journalists particularly vulnerable to attack from rebels and
paramilitaries. In January, rebel fighters kidnapped two foreign
journalists who were on assignment for the Los Angeles Times and held
them for several days. The government’s failure to prosecute these
crimes perpetuates a climate of impunity that leaves the media wide open
to violence and has led many journalists to go into
exile.
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BELARUS Belarusian president
Aleksandr Lukashenko continues his assault against the country’s
beleaguered independent and opposition press. In April 2003, he
announced plans to create a “state ideology system” that will give the
government Big Brother–like controls over the nonstate media’s news
coverage. Meanwhile, the proposed Law on Mass Media will make Internet
publications subject to the same crippling censorship as the printed
press.
In 2002, for the first time, journalists in Belarus were
convicted of criminal libel and received corrective labor sentences
ranging from 12 to 24 months for criticizing Lukashenko ahead of fall
2001 presidential elections. Politically motivated civil libel lawsuits,
with exorbitant fines, continue to debilitate the media, forcing one
prominent independent publication to close in 2002.
The July 2000
disappearance of Russian cameraman Dmitry Zavadsky is a chilling
reminder of the risks faced by journalists in Belarus. Although two
former members of Belarus’ elite Almaz special forces unit were
convicted in 2002 of kidnapping the journalist, state prosecutors failed
to investigate allegations of government involvement. The Prosecutor
General’s Office reopened the Zavadsky case in December, but no progress
has been reported.
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| All Photos:
Associated Press |