ኢትዮጵያ በሚዲያ ነፃነት ከ180 ሃገራት 143ኛ ወጣች። ታናሽ እህቷ ኤርትራ ከ180 ው 180ኛ በመውጣት የውድድሩ ውራ ሆናለች።
በሚቀጥለው አመት በልማታዊ ሚዲያ ላይ ያተኩረችው ሃገራችን በሩጫ ውድድርና ጋዜጠኞችን በሩጫ በማባረር ከአለም አንደኛ ትወጣለች ተብሎ ይገመታል።
ለዝርዝሩ እዚህ ይመልከቱ:http://rsf.org/index2014/en-index2014.php#
በሚቀጥለው አመት በልማታዊ ሚዲያ ላይ ያተኩረችው ሃገራችን በሩጫ ውድድርና ጋዜጠኞችን በሩጫ በማባረር ከአለም አንደኛ ትወጣለች ተብሎ ይገመታል።
ለዝርዝሩ እዚህ ይመልከቱ:http://rsf.org/index2014/en-index2014.php#
The 2014
World Press Freedom Index spotlights the negative impact of conflicts on
freedom of information and its protagonists. The ranking of some countries has
also been affected by a tendency to interpret national security needs in an
overly broad and abusive manner to the detriment of the right to inform and be
informed. This trend constitutes a growing threat worldwide and is even
endangering freedom of information in countries regarded as democracies.
Finland tops the index for the fourth year running, closely followed by
Netherlands and Norway, like last year. At the other end of the index, the last
three positions are again held by Turkmenistan, North Korea and Eritrea, three
countries where freedom of information is non-existent. Despite occasional turbulence
in the past year, these countries continue to be news and information black
holes and living hells for the journalists who inhabit them. This year’s index
covers 180 countries, one more than last year. The new entry, Belize, has been
assigned an enviable position (29th). Cases of violence against journalists are
rare in Belize but there were some problems: defamation suits involving demands
for large amounts in damages, national security restrictions on implementation
of the Freedom of Information Act and sometimes unfair management of broadcast
frequencies.
FALLS DUE TO ARMED
CONFLICTS
The 2014
index underscores the negative correlation between freedom of information and
conflicts, both open conflicts and undeclared ones. In an unstable environment,
the media become strategic goals and targets for groups or individuals whose
attempts to control news and information violate the guarantees enshrined in
international law, in particular, article 19 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, the 1949 Geneva Conventions and the 1977 Protocols
Additional 1 and 2 to the Geneva Conventions.
Syria
(unchanged at 177th) has been an extreme example of this since March 2011. Now
one of the countries where freedom of information and its actors are most in
danger, it rubs shoulders with the bottom three. The Syrian crisis has also had
dramatic repercussions throughout the region, reinforcing media polarization in
Lebanon (106th, -4), encouraging the Jordanian authorities to tighten their
grip, and accelerating the spiral of violence in Iraq (153rd, -2), where
tension between Shiites and Sunnis is growing.
In Iran
(173rd, +2), one of the Middle East’s key countries, there has so far been no
implementation of the promises to improve
freedom of information that the new president, Hassan Rouhani, made. Coverage of the Syrian tragedy in both the official Iranian press and
on the blogosphere is closely watched by the regime, which cracks down on any
criticism of its foreign policy.
This
negative correlation is also seen in the big falls registered by Mali (122nd,
-22) and Central African Republic (109th, -34). The open or internecine warfare
destabilizing Democratic Republic of Congo (151st, -8) and the activities of
guerrillas and terrorist groups in Somalia (176th, unchanged) and Nigeria
(112th, +4) prevented any significant improvement in their ranking.
The
formation of a government led by Mohamed Morsi in Egypt (159th, unchanged) in
the summer 2012 was accompanied by an increase in abuses
against journalists and all-out efforts to bring the media under the Muslim
Brotherhood’s control. That was brought to a
complete halt by the army’s return to power a year later. The ensuing
persecution of the Muslim Brotherhood affected not only Egyptian journalists
but also their Turkish, Palestinian and Syrian colleagues. In the Persian Gulf,
especially the United Arab Emirates (118th, -3), bloggers and journalists
were arrested and tried on charges of links to the Brotherhood.
The
upsurge in violence against journalists finally elicited a response from the
international community – in terms of resolutions, at least. The United Nations
General Assembly adopted its first-ever resolution on the safety of journalists
by consensus on 26 November. It included a call for 2
November to be celebrated as International Day to End Impunity for crimes of
violence against journalists.
It was
unquestionably a step in the right direction, complementing Resolution 1738
condemning attacks on journalists in armed conflicts, which the Security
Council adopted in December 2006 on Reporters Without Borders’ initiative, and
the UN Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalists and Impunity, adopted in
April 2012. Reporters Without Borders now wants the UN to create a group of
independent experts with the task of monitoring respect by member states for
their obligations, in particular, their obligation to protect journalists, to
investigate all cases of violence against them, and bring those responsible to
justice.
INFORMATION SACRIFICED TO NATIONAL SECURITY AND SURVEILLANCE
Countries
that pride themselves on being democracies and respecting the rule of law have
not set an example, far from it. Freedom of information is too often sacrificed
to an overly broad and abusive interpretation of national security needs,
marking a disturbing retreat from democratic practices. Investigative
journalism often suffers as a result.
This has
been the case in the United States (46th), which fell 13 places, one of the
most significant declines, amid increased efforts to track down whistleblowers
and the sources of leaks. The trial and conviction of Private
Bradley Manning and the pursuit of NSA analyst
Edward Snowden were warnings to all
those thinking of assisting in the disclosure of sensitive information that
would clearly be in the public interest.
US
journalists were stunned by the Department of Justice’s
seizure of Associated Press phone records without warning in order to identify the source of a CIA leak. It
served as a reminder of the urgent need for a “shield
law” to protect the confidentiality of journalists’ sources at the federal level. The revival of the legislative process is
little consolation forJames Risen of The
New York Times, who is subject to a court order to testify against a former
CIA employee accused of leaking classified information. And less still for Barrett Brown, a young
freelance journalist facing 105 years in prison in connection with the posting of information that hackers
obtained from Statfor, a private intelligence company with close ties to the
federal government.
The
United Kingdom (33rd, -3) distinguished itself in the war on terror by the disgraceful pressure it
put on The Guardiannewspaper and
by its detention of David
Miranda, journalist Glenn Greenwald’s partner and
assistant, for nine hours. Both the US and UK authorities seem obsessed with
hunting down whistleblowers instead of adopting legislation to rein in abusive
surveillance practices that negate privacy, a democratic value cherished in
both countries.
The “special intelligence
protection bill” that the National
Diet in Japan (59th, - 5) adopted in late 2013 would reduce government
transparency on such key national issues as nuclear power and relations with
the United States, now enshrined as taboos. Investigative journalism, public
interest and the confidentiality of journalists’ sources are all being
sacrificed by legislators bent on ensuring that their country’s image is spared
embarrassing revelations.
The “war
on terror” is also being exploited by governments that are quick to treat
journalists as “threats to national security.” Dozens of journalists have been
jailed on this pretext in Turkey (154th), especially for covering the Kurdish
issue. In Morocco, unchanged in 136th position, the authorities readily
confused journalism with terrorism since the case of online newspaper
editor Ali Anouzla. In Israel (96th, +17),
freedom of information is often sacrificed to purported security requirements.
In
India’s northern Kashmir region, mobile Internet and
communications are suspended in response to any unrest. In the north of Sri Lanka (165th, -2), the army reigns supreme,
tolerating no challenge to the official vision of the “pacification” process in
Tamil separatism’s former strongholds. Alarmed by the Arab Spring turmoil,
authoritarian regimes in the Arabian Peninsula and Central Asia have stepped up
media censorship and surveillance to head off any “attempt at destabilization.”
PRIVATIZATION OF VIOLENCE
Non-state
groups constitute the main source of physical danger for journalists in a
number of countries. The militias fomenting chaos in the new Libya (137th, -5)
and Yemeni armed groups linked to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula are leading
examples of this privatization of violence. Al-Shabaab in Somalia (176th,
unchanged) and the M23 movement in Democratic Republic of Congo (151st, -8)
both regard journalists as enemies. Jihadi groups such as Jabhat Al-Nosra andIslamic State in Iraq and
the Levant (ISIS) use violence against
news providers as part of their drive to control the regions they “liberate.”
Organized
crime is a fearsome predator for journalists in many parts of the world,
especially Honduras (129th, -1), Guatemala (125th, -29), Brazil (111th, -2) and
Paraguay (105th, -13), but also Pakistan, China, Kyrgyzstan and the Balkans. In
organized crime’s shadow, it is hard if not impossible to refrain from
self-censorship on such sensitive subjects as drug-trafficking, corruption and
criminal penetration of the state apparatus. The passivity or indifference
often shown by authorities towards crimes of violence against the media, or
sometimes even their connivance or direct involvement, reinforces the impunity
enjoyed by those responsible and fuels the cycle of violence against news
providers.
L’indice annuel de la liberté de la presse, inauguré lors du Classement
2013, confirme une dégradation, à l’échelle mondiale, de la situation du droit
d’informer et d’être informé. L’indice passe de 3 395 à 3 456 (+61), soit une
augmentation de 1,8 % qui révèle une légère dégradation globale de la liberté
de l’information entre l’édition 2013 et l’édition 2014 du Classement
mondial.Si l’année 2013 a été moins meurtrière pour les journalistes que la
précédente, marquée par une hécatombe pour la profession, les agressions et
menaces ont été plus nombreuses. La hausse de l’indice s’explique par
l’évolution non seulement des exactions, mais aussi de l’ensemble des
indicateurs utilisés pour compiler le classement :
—
Pluralism, meaning the representation of different views in the media; —
Independence of the media vis-à-vis political, economic, religious and military
centres of power; — Quality of the legislation governing the media; —
Transparency of the bodies regulating the media; — Performance of the
infrastructure supporting the media; — Overall climate for freedom of
information.
The
indicator is a tool for measuring overall performance. The breakdown of the
indicator’s scores by region shows a worsening in all continents except Asia,
where it was unchanged. Like last year, the European Union and Balkans obtained
the best score (17.6), followed by the Americas (30.3), Africa (35.6),
Asia-Pacific (42.2), Eastern Europe and Central Asia (45.5) and finally Middle
East and North Africa (48.7).
Annual
media freedom indicator: 3456 in 2014 (3395 in
2013)
- European Union and Balkans:
17.6 (17.5)
- Americas: 30,3 (30,0)
- Africa : 35,6 (34,3)
- Asia-Pacific: 42,2 (42,2)
- Eastern Europe and Central Asia: 45,5 (45,3)
- Middle East and North Africa: 48,7 (48,5)
NOTEWORTHY FALLS
In the
Americas, the 13-place fall registered by the United States (46th, -13) was
more than doubled by Guatemala (125th, -29), which saw a two-fold increase in
the number of physical attacks on journalists, including four murders, and was equalled by Paraguay (105th, -13), where the pressure on
journalists to censor themselves keeps on mounting. Paraguay had already
plummeted last year, following a coup in June 2012, three years after a coup
sent Honduras (129th, -1) to the level where it remains in the current
post-election chaos.
In
Africa, the two most noteworthy falls, by Mali and Central African Republic,
were due to armed conflicts mentioned above. In Burundi, where a presidential
election is imminent, the senate passed a law
restricting the freedom of journalists. In
Kenya (90th, -18), the government’s much criticized authoritarian response to
the media’s coverage of the Westgate Mall attacks was compounded by dangerous
parliamentary initiatives, above all a law adopted at the end of
2013 creating a special court to judge audiovisual content.
In
Guinea (102nd, -15), journalists found it dangerous and difficult to work
during elections marked by many protests. Several journalists were attacked or
injured by over-excited demonstrators or by members of the security forces
dispersing the protests. Zambia (93rd, -20), which had progressed in recent
years, was dragged down by measures to censor and
block news websites. Finally, rulers who have
clung to power for years and fear change got tougher with the media, resulting
in abusive prosecutions in Chad (139th, -17) and several closures in Cameroon
(131st, -10).
The
13-place fall by Kuwait (91st) reflects the tougher measures being taken with
the media including the adoption of a law that allows the authorities to fine journalists up to 300,000
dinars (1 million dollars) for criticizing the emir or the crown prince, or
misrepresenting what they say, and impose sentences of up to 10 years in prison
on journalists who insult God, the Prophets of Islam, or the Prophet Mohamed’s
wives or companions.
These
spectacular changes should not make us forget the tragic immobility at the
bottom of the index where Vietnam (173rd, -1), Uzbekistan (166th, -1) and Saudi
Arabia (164th, unchanged), to name but three, continue to tighten their grip on
news and information and adapt their methods of radical censorship to the
digital era. The cruellest punishments await those of their citizens who have
the courage to resist. In Kazakhstan (161st, unchanged) and Azerbaijan (160th,
-3), media pluralism is in the process of succumbing to the increasingly
repressive tendencies of rulers clinging to power.
NOTEWORTHY RISES
Violence against journalists, direct censorship and misuse of judicial
proceedings are on the decline in Panama (87th, +25), Dominican Republic (68th,
+13), Bolivia (94th, +16) and Ecuador (94th, +25), although in Ecuador the
level of media polarization is still high and often detrimental to public
debate.
The past
year was marked by laudable legislative developments in some countries such as
South Africa (42nd, +11), where the president refused to sign
a law that would have endangered investigative journalism.
In
Georgia (84th, +17), the 2013 presidential election was less tense that the
previous year’s parliamentary elections, which were marked by physical attacks
and hate campaigns against journalists. Thanks to political cohabitation and
then a change of government through the polls, Georgia has recovered some of
the terrain lost in recent years as the Saakashvili administration’s reforming
zeal ran out of steam. Media polarization will nonetheless continue to be a
challenge in the coming years.
Israel’s
17-place rise must be offset against its 20-place fall in the 2013 index as a result
of Operation “Pillar of
Defence” in November 2012, when two Palestinian
journalists were killed, and the many raids it carried out against Palestinian
media. Security needs continue to be used as an excuse to limit freedom of
information. The Israeli media are able to be outspoken but media located in “Israeli
territory” must comply with prior military censorship and gag orders.
Investigative reporting involving national security is not welcome.
Abusive
treatment of Palestinian and foreign journalists by the Israel Defence Forces
is common, especially during the weekly demonstrations at the Separation Wall.
Many photojournalists were deliberately targeted when leaving the
demonstrations in November 2013. On 4 December, an Israeli
high court endorsed the seizure of equipment from Wattan TV during an IDF raid in February 2012.
Timor-Leste
(77th) rose 14 places in the wake of a historic journalists’
congress in Dili on 25-27 October at
which a code of professional conduct and the creation of a seven-member Press
Council were approved. But continuing vigilance is needed. The media law
currently before parliament is the next challenge for media freedom in
Timor-Leste.
REGIONAL MODELS IN DECLINE?
The
movements of some countries in the index, which are indicative of their
approach to freedom of information, has an impact not only on their own
population but also on neighbouring countries because of their regional
importance and influence and the fact that they are regarded – rightly or not –
as models to be watched or followed. South Africa’s 11-place rise to 42nd
position contrasts with the performance of other countries regarded as regional
models, which have either shown no improvement or are in decline.
The
European Union’s members are becoming more dispersed in the index, a
development accelerated by the effects of the economic crisis and outbreaks of
populism. Greece (99th, -14) and Hungary (64th, -7) are the most notable
examples. In Greece, journalists are often the
victims of physical attacks by members of Golden Dawn, the neo-Nazi party that entered parliament in June 2012. The
government’s actions have also contributed to the fall. By closing the state
broadcaster under pressure from the Troika (the European Commission, European
Central Bank and IMF), Prime Minister Antonis Samaras seems to be cutting back
on democracy to save money.
In
Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government gives the impression of
having abandoned EU values in its zeal for draconian reforms. As a direct
result of the European model’s erosion, the EU is finding it harder to get
membership candidates to improve their position in the index. Membership
negotiations are no longer necessarily accompanied by efforts to increase
respect for civil liberties. Macedonia (123rd), for example, has never been so
low in the index.
The
western hemisphere’s giants – United States (46th, -13) and Brazil (111th, -2)
– have not set an example either. Since 9/11, the former has been torn by the
conflict between national security imperatives and respect for the principles
of the First Amendment. Thanks to organized crime’s impact, the latter is one
of the continent’s deadliest countries for the media, while its media pluralism
is handicapped by the phenomenon of powerful politicians who are also big
businessmen and media owners, with the result that Brazil has been dubbed “the
country of 30 Berlusconis.”
Russia
(148th) might have been lower in the index had it not been for the stubbornness
and resistance shown by its civil society. But the authorities keep on
intensifying the crackdown begun when Vladimir
Putin returned to the Kremlin in 2012 and are exporting their model throughout
the former Soviet Union. From Ukraine (127th, unchanged) and Azerbaijan (160th,
-3) to Central Asia, Russia’s repressive legislation and communications
surveillance methods are happily copied. Moscow also uses UN bodies and
regional alliances such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in its efforts
to undermine international standards on freedom of information.
Despite
its regional aspirations, Turkey (154th) registered no improvement and
continues to be one of the world’s biggest prisons for journalists. The Gezi
Park revolt highlighted the repressive methods used
by the security forces, the increase in
self-censorship and the dangers of the prime minister’s populist discourse. In
view of the upcoming elections and the unpredictability of the peace process
with the Kurdish separatists, 2014 is likely to be a decisive year for the
future of civil liberties in Turkey.
Chine
(175th, -1) failed to improve its ranking because, despite having an
astonishing vital and increasingly militant blogosphere, it continues to censor
and jail dissident bloggers and journalists. This new power is also using its
economic might to extend its influence over the media in Hong Kong, Macau and
Taiwan, compromising their independence.
India
(140th, +1) experienced an unprecedented wave of violence against journalists,
with eight killed in 2013. They are targeted by both state and non-state
actors. Almost no region is spared but Kashmir and Chhattisgarh continue to be
the only two where violence and censorship are endemic. Those responsible for
threats and physical violence against journalists, who are often abandoned by
the judicial system and forced to censor themselves, include police and
security forces as well as criminal groups, demonstrators and political party
supporters.
The
substantial reforms in Burma, which could become a regional model for a
transition to democracy, were reflected in a big leap in the 2013 index. As the
reform process begins to flag, the “Burmese model” has yet to prove itself.
source:http://rsf.org/index2014/en-index2014.php#
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