OneWorld.net's take: Peace, not economic prosperity, is critical to press freedom in a divided and conflicted post-9/11 world, says an annual ranking by an organization working to protect journalists' rights.
Students in Venezuela demand freedom of speech at the Universidad Simon Bolivar in Caracas. © a*Andres (flickr)China -- ranked 167 on the press freedom index -- has decided to permanently retain special
regulations enacted for foreign media during the 2008 Summer Olympics, reports Human Rights Watch. If implemented, the decision
may signal the onset of greater press freedom in the notoriously
restrictive state, says the human rights watchdog.
The world press freedom index "measures the state of press freedom in the world. It reflects the degree of freedom that journalists and news organisations enjoy in each country, and the efforts made by the authorities to respect and ensure respect for this freedom," says Reporters Without Borders. To collect this data, Reporters Without Borders prepares a questionnaire with 49 criteria aimed at assessing the state of press freedom in each country surveyed.
From: Reporters Without Borders
It is not economic prosperity but peace
that guarantees press freedom. That is the main lesson to be drawn from
the world press freedom index that Reporters Without Borders compiles
every year and from the 2008 edition, released today. Another
conclusion from the index - in which the bottom three rungs are again
occupied by the “infernal trio” of Turkmenistan (171st), North Korea
(172nd) and Eritrea (173rd) - is that the international community’s
conduct towards authoritarian regimes such as Cuba (169th) and China
(167th) is not effective enough to yield results.
“The post-9/11 world is now clearly
drawn,” Reporters Without Borders said. “Destabilised and on the
defensive, the leading democracies are gradually eroding the space for
freedoms. The economically most powerful dictatorships arrogantly
proclaim their authoritarianism, exploiting the international
community’s divisions and the ravages of the wars carried out in the
name of the fight against terrorism. Religious and political taboos are
taking greater hold by the year in countries that used to be advancing
down the road of freedom.”
“The world’s closed countries, governed
by the worst press freedom predators, continue to muzzle their media at
will, with complete impunity, while organisations such as the UN lose
all authority over their members,” Reporters Without Borders added. “In
contrast with this generalised decline, there are economically weak
countries that nonetheless guarantee their population the right to
disagree with the government and to say so publicly.”
War and peace
Two aspects stand out in the index,
which covers the 12 months to 1 September 2008. One is Europe’s
preeminence. Aside from New Zealand and Canada, the first 20 positions
are held by European countries. The other is the very respectable
ranking achieved by certain Central American and Caribbean countries.
Jamaica and Costa Rica are in 21st and 22nd positions, rubbing
shoulders with Hungary (23rd). Just a few position below them are
Surinam (26th) and Trinidad and Tobago (27th). These small Caribbean
countries have done much better than France (35th), which has fallen
again this year, this time by four places, and Spain (36th) and Italy
(44th), countries held back again by political or mafia violence.
Namibia (23rd), a large and now peaceful southern African country that
came first in Africa, ahead of Ghana (31st), was just one point short
of joining the top 20.
The economic disparities among the top
20 are immense. Iceland’s per capita GDP is 10 times Jamaica’s. What
they have in common is a parliamentary democratic system, and not being
involved in any war.
This is not the case with the United States (36th domestically and
119th outside its own territory) and Israel (46th domestically and
149th outside its own territory), whose armed forces killed a
Palestinian journalist for the first time since 2003. A resumption of
fighting also affected Georgia (120th) and Niger, which fell sharply
from 95th in 2007 to 130th this year. Although they have democratic
political systems, these countries are embroiled in low or high
intensity conflicts and their journalists, exposed to the dangers of
combat or repression, are easy prey. The recent provisional release of
Moussa Kaka, the Niger correspondent of RFI and Reporters Without
Borders, after 384 days in prison in Niamey and cameraman Sami al-Haj’s
release after six years in the hell of Guantanamo serve as reminders
that wars sweep away not only lives but also, and above all, freedom.
Under fire from belligerents or intrusive governments
Countries that have become embroiled in
very violent conflicts after failing to resolve serious political
problems, such as Iraq (158th), Pakistan (152nd), Afghanistan (156th)
and Somalia (153rd), continue to be highly dangerous “black zones” for
the press, places where journalists are targets for murder, kidnapping,
arbitrary arrest or death threats every day. They may come under fire
from the parties at war. They may be accused of taking sides. Any
excuse will do to get rid of “trouble-makers” and “spies.” Such is the
case in the Palestinian Territories (163rd), especially the Gaza Strip,
where the situation got much worse after Hamas seized power. At the
same time, in Sri Lanka (165th), where there is an elected government,
the press has to face violence that is only too often organised by the
state.
Bringing up the rear are the
dictatorships - some disguised, some not - where dissidents and
pro-reform journalists manage to open cracks in the walls that enclose
them. The year of the Olympics in the new Asian power, China (167th),
was the year that Hu Jia and many other dissidents and journalists were
jailed. But it also provided opportunities to those liberal media that
are trying gradually to free themselves of the country’s still
pervasive police control. Being a journalist in Beijing or Shanghai -
or in Iran (166th), Uzbekistan (162nd) and Zimbabwe (151st) - is a high
risk exercise involving endless frustration and constant police and
judicial harassment. In Burma (170th), run by a xenophobic and
inflexible junta, journalists and intellectuals, even foreign ones,
have for years been viewed as enemies by the regime, and they pay the
price.
Unchanging hells
In Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali’s Tunisia
(143rd), Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya (160rd), Alexander Lukashenko’s
Belarus (154th), Bashar el-Assad’s Syria (159e) and Teodoro Obiang
Nguema’s Equatorial Guinea (156th), the leader’s ubiquitous portrait on
the streets and front pages of the newspapers is enough to dispel any
doubt about the lack of press freedom. Other dictatorships do without a
personality cult but are just as suffocating. Nothing is possible in
Laos (164th) or Saudi Arabia (161st) if it does not accord with
government policy.
Finally, North Korea and Turkmenistan
are unchanging hells in which the population is cut off from the world
and is subjected to propaganda worthy of a bygone age. And in Eritrea
(173rd), which has come last for the second year running, President
Issaias Afeworki and his small clan of paranoid nationalists continue
to run Africa’s youngest country like a vast open prison.
The international community, including
the European Union, endlessly repeats that the only solution continues
to be “dialogue.” But dialogue has clearly had little success and even
the most authoritarian governments are still able to ignore
remonstrations without risking any repercussions other than the
inconsequential displeasure of the occasional diplomat.
Dangers of corruption and political hatred
The other disease that eats away at
democracies and makes them lose ground in the ranking is corruption.
The bad example of Bulgaria (59th), still last in Europe, serves as a
reminder that universal suffrage, media pluralism and some
constitutional guarantees are not enough to ensure effective press
freedom. The climate must also favour the flow of information and
expression of opinions. The social and political tensions in Peru
(108th) and Kenya (97th), the media politicisation in Madagascar (94th)
and Bolivia (115th) and the violence against investigative journalists
in Brazil (82nd) are all examples of the kinds of poison that blight
emerging democracies. And the existence of people who break the law to
get rich and who punish inquisitive journalists with impunity is a
scourge that keeps several “great countries” - such as Nigeria (131st),
Mexico (140th) and India (118th) - in shameful positions.
Certain would-be “great countries”
deliberately behave in a manner that is brutal, unfair or just
disturbing. The examples include Venezuela (113th), where President
Hugo Chávez’s personality and decrees are often crushing, and the
Putin-Medvedev duo’s Russia (141st), where state and opposition media
are strictly controlled and journalists such as Anna Politkovskaya are
killed each year by “unidentified” gunmen who often turn out to have
close links with the Kremlin’s security services.
Resisting the taboos
The ranking’s “soft underbelly” also
includes countries that waver between repression and liberalisation,
where the taboos are still inviolable and the press laws hark back to
another era. In Gabon (110th), Cameroon (129th), Morocco (122nd), Oman
(123rd), Cambodia (126th), Jordan (128th) and Malaysia (132nd), for
example, it is strictly forbidden to report anything that reflects
badly on the president or monarch, or their family and close
associates. Journalists are routinely sent to prison in Senegal (86th)
and Algeria (121st) under repressive legislation that violates the
democratic standards advocated by the UN.
Online repression also exposes these
tenacious taboos. In Egypt (146th), demonstrations launched online
shook the capital and alarmed the government, which now regards every
Internet user as a potential danger. The use of Internet filtering is
growing by the year and the most repressive governments do not hesitate
to jail bloggers. While China still leads the “Internet black hole”
ranking worldwide, deploying considerable technical resources to
control Internet users, Syria (159th) is the Middle-East champion in
cyber-repression. Internet surveillance is so thorough there that even
the least criticism posted online is sooner or later followed by arrest.
Only a few countries have risen
significantly in the ranking. Lebanon (66th), for example, has climbed
back to a more logical position after the end of the bomb attacks on
influential journalists of recent years. Haiti (73rd) continues its
slow rise, as do Argentina (68th) and Maldives (104th). But the
democratic transition has halted in Mauritania (105th), preventing it
from continuing its rise, while the slender gains of the past few years
in Chad (133rd) and Sudan (135th) were swept away by the overnight
introduction of censorship.