Restrictions On Press Freedom Intensifying
Restrictions On Press Freedom Intensifying, Concludes Freedom House In "2010 Freedom Of The Press" Study
SOURCE: Freedom House
(Freedom House/IFEX) - Washington - April 29, 2010 -
Global press freedom declined in 2009, with setbacks
registered in almost every region of the world, according a
Freedom House study released today. The study, Freedom of
the Press 2010: A Global Survey of Media Independence,
reported that press freedom declined for the eighth
consecutive year, producing a global landscape in which only
one in six people live in countries with a free press. Among
the report's key findings:
• Significant declines
outnumbered gains by a 2-to-1 margin. Notable regional
declines were registered in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin
America, as well as the Middle East.
• Declines in
important emerging democracies demonstrate the fragility of
press freedom in such environments. Namibia and South
Africa, two of the new democracies, dropped from Free to
Partly Free. Worrying declines were also registered in
Mexico, the Philippines, and Senegal.
• The only
region to show overall improvement was Asia-Pacific, spurred
by notable gains in South Asia that included status changes
in Bangladesh and Bhutan from Not Free to Partly Free and a
numerical score jump for the Maldives.
• Governments
in China, Russia, Venezuela, and others have been
systematically encroaching on the comparatively free
environment of the internet and new media. Sophisticated
techniques are being used to censor and block access to
particular types of information, to flood the internet with
antidemocratic, nationalistic views, and to provide broad
surveillance of citizen activity.
• Journalists are
increasingly the victims of assault and murder, a trend
fueled by impunity for past crimes.
"Freedom of expression is fundamental to all other freedoms. Rule of law, fair elections, minority rights, freedom of association, and accountable government all depend on an independent press which can fulfill its watchdog function," said Jennifer Windsor, executive director of Freedom House. "This is why these findings are so utterly disturbing. When the Iranian Revolutionary Guards torture a journalist, or Communist authorities in China imprison a blogger, or criminal elements in Russia assassinate yet another investigative reporter, it sends a clear message that every person fighting for basic rights is vulnerable to a similar fate."
While a range of restrictive laws and violence against journalists continue to hamper media freedom, additional reasons for the global decline include the unique pressures placed on media in countries in the midst of political conflict, as well as intensified constraints on internet freedom. The globalization of censorship by countries such as China and international bodies such as the Organization of the Islamic Conference poses an additional threat to freedom of expression, as does the increasingly worrisome phenomenon of "libel tourism" centered on the United Kingdom.
30-Year Trends
In the 30 years since
Freedom House began measuring global media freedom, the
landscape has changed considerably:
• In 1980, media
freedom was concentrated in Western Europe; only 22 percent
of the world's countries enjoyed a rating of Free, while 53
percent were Not Free.
• By 1990, the share of Not
Free countries had declined to 47 percent; by 2000, it was
just 35 percent.
• Over the past decade, the positive
momentum that followed the fall of the Berlin Wall has
stalled, and in some cases has been reversed. For the past
eight years, there have been gradual declines on a global
scale, with the most pronounced setbacks taking place in
Latin America and the former Soviet Union.
"Unfortunately, the positive changes seen in earlier decades have not been consolidated," noted Karin Deutsch Karlekar, managing editor of the study. "While the media landscape around the world has opened considerably - due in part to the impact of privately owned and satellite broadcast media and the internet - both governments and non-state actors have found new ways to restrict the independence of the media and the free flow of information."
"The steps backwards taken by a number of the new democracies are particularly disturbing," said Karlekar, citing the declines in Namibia, the Philippines, Senegal, and South Africa as examples. "Journalists in many countries cannot do their job without fear of repercussions."
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