|
2006's War on Journalism
|
View this Thread in Original format
| Lilith |
| quote: | 2006 'most savage' year for journalists
A media watchdog has described 2006 as the "most savage and brutal" year on record for journalists, with 100 media professionals killed across the world.
International Press Institute director Johann Fritz says last year saw a "war on journalism".
"With 100 journalists killed, 2006 was the most savage and brutal year in the history of the modern media," he said in the IPI's annual report.
Iraq, where more than 150 media workers have died since the 2003 US-led invasion, has topped the list as the world's most dangerous place for the media for the fourth year.
In 2006, 46 journalists died reporting the conflict.
The report says the deaths were targeted killings in almost all cases.
Journalists were killed in 23 other nations last year.
The second most deadly country was the Philippines, with 10 killings.
The IPI study covers 180 countries. Seven journalists died in Mexico, five in Sri Lanka, four in Pakistan, three each in Afghanistan and Colombia, and two each in Venezuela, Russia, India and China.
The report says most of the victims were from the local media and almost all the killings were carried out with impunity.
The IPI, which comprises media workers drawn from 120 countries, says the highest toll recorded in the recent past was in 1999, when 86 journalists died during the course of their work.
A total of 65 journalists died in 2005, 13 less than the preceding year.
Media Freedom
The watchdog also says several countries continue to gag journalists, making it impossible for them to work freely.
It has singled out North Korea, Turkmenistan, Libya, Syria and Saudi Arabia as being among the most repressive.
The report also points to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gambia, Zimbabwe and Russia as countries where journalists were subject to exactions and violence.
The organisation has also expressed concern over legal action following the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.
The cartoons sparked violent protests in several countries after they were published in a Danish newspaper and reproduced elsewhere.
The IPI has blasted attempts to push through a clause to ban "religious defamation" in several countries and in the United Nations.
Earlier, the media rights groups the International Federation of Journalists and Journalists Without Borders had put the toll of journalists killed last year at 155 and 81 respectively.
The figures are at variance due to differing views of what happened in some incidents but also because of different definitions of what constitutes a journalist.
Source- AFP
|
Not suprising there with Iraq, though Russia has been bumped down a few pegs from it's #3 position. Philippines was a bit of a surprise.
I guess it's relevance to us is, where do you trust your news sources to be comparatively influence free of the fear of assassination and retribution from the state. Course it doesn't really also cover the parts where information doesn't get out and how it is manipulated by other 'non lethal' influence.
Things to consider at least when researching your sources. |
|
|
| CranberryJuice |
Philippines surprised me as well , i would have rather thought of birmania
anyway is even philippines mentionned on the news here? for a lot of countries unless some big things happen , no need to talk about it i mean let's be clear the interests represented by these countries are not worth enough
like darfur....it took a while to mention about it now the conflict is slowly extending to tchad ....we start speaking about it and the examples could go on and then it's a big rush ....and people decide it's time to stop !
oh yes !awesome!
:rolleyes:
the main problem about information is just to avoid the trap of believing what the medias or wait what the governement , state can say .....so as to have as much as unbiased informations as possible
that's why trying to read different newspapers online for example or check different channels can give u a broader opinion about facts and what's going on |
|
|
| Lilith |
Yeah I was very surprised by the Phillipines because off the top of my head I honestly don't remember much happening there except for the suppression of a coup around the first quarter of 2006 but I don't remember it being particularly bloody or anything.
As for Darfur, it's being going for years. Basically Sudan or whatever it's split into now has been in some kind of conflict with either themselves or their neighbours since the 80's, flares up every 10-15 years or so and then goes back to a quiet rumble. Got me curious as to why they've been quiet about releasing information only in the last year or so. |
|
|
|
|