PARIS,
October 20, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Press freedom
is being eroded in parts of the Western world, failing to advance in
Iraq, but making progress in states emerging from repression, the
watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) reported Thursday, October 20.
"The
situation in Iraq deteriorated further during the year as the safety of
journalists became more precarious," RSF said on its Web site,
citing its annual press freedom index.
"At
least 24 journalists and media assistants have been killed so far this
year, making it the mostly deadly conflict for the media since World War
II. A total of 72 media workers have been killed since the fighting
began in March 2003."
The
US army (United States in Iraq, 137) also violated press freedom, as it
did in 2003 and 2004, RSF said.
"Six
journalists were jailed in Abu Ghraib prison without explanation and not
allowed to receive visits from their lawyers, families or employers.
Four journalists were killed by US army gunfire between September 2004
and September 2005."
Its
2005 annual press freedom index again puts North Korea at the bottom of
the list in 167th position, while Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Ireland,
the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland share top spot.
The
top 10 countries are all European. New Zealand (12), Trinidad and Tobago
(12), Benin (25) and South Korea (34) are the highest-ranked countries
in other continents.
Some
Western democracies slipped down the index. The United States (44) fell
more than 20 places, mainly because of the imprisonment of New York
Times reporter Judith Miller and legal moves undermining the privacy of
journalistic sources.
"Canada
(21) also dropped several places due to decisions that weakened the
privacy of sources and sometimes turned journalists into 'court
auxiliaries'. France (30) also slipped, largely because of searches of
media offices, interrogations of journalists and introduction of new
press offences."
The
Paris-based watchdog reports that Middle Eastern countries (Iran 164,
Iraq 157, Saudi Arabia 154, Syria 145) are among states where
journalists have the toughest time and where government repression or
armed groups prevent the media from operating freely.
Better
Records
There
was better news from countries which have recently won or retained their
independence, says the report, disproving the argument that democracy
takes decades to establish itself.
"Nine
states that have had independence (or recovered it) within the past 15
years are among the top 60 countries -- Slovenia (9), Estonia (11),
Latvia (16), Lithuania (21), Namibia (25), Bosnia-Hercegovina (33),
Macedonia (43), Croatia (56) and East Timor (58)," RSF said on its
Web site.
"More
and more African and Latin American countries (Benin 25, Namibia 25, El
Salvador 28, Cape Verde 29, Mauritius 34, Mali 37, Costa Rica 41 and
Bolivia 45) are getting very good rankings."
Iran
once again had the region's worst record of press freedom, with seven
journalists in prison and four others provisionally free and in danger
of being returned to jail at any moment.
"Akbar
Ganji is still being held in solitary confinement despite a more than
60-day hunger-strike, an international campaign and several official
promises to free him. Cyber-dissident Mojtaba Saminejad has been in jail
since October 2004, serving a two-year sentence."
Vietnam
and China were among the last ten countries on the list, with North
Korea at the very bottom of the index.