Wednesday, October 22, 2008

WORLD PRESS FREEDOM INDEX: ONLY PEACE PROTECTS FREEDOMS IN POST-9/11 WORLD


Reporters Without Borders/Reporters sans frontières

 22 October 2008

Democracies embroiled in wars outside their own territory, such as the United States or Israel, fall further in the ranking every year while several emerging countries, especially in Africa and the Caribbean, give better and better guarantees for media freedom

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.

Close-up on… Asia

Asia still has the biggest representation in the 10 countries at the bottom of the ranking. Most of them are dictatorships, but they also for the first time include Sri Lanka (165th), which has an elected government and where the press faces violence that is only too often organised by the state.

At the other end of the spectrum, New Zealand (7th), Australia (28th) and Japan (29th) - countries where democracy is deeply anchored - are in the top 30. New Zealand is one of the only two non-European countries in the top 20, the other being Canada (13th).

Some young democracies have advanced significantly in the past year. Maldives (104th) now has a flourishing independent press. The same goes for Bhutan (74th), where the first privately-owned news media are gradually establishing a distinct identity for themselves.

Afghanistan (156th), on the other hand, has fallen in the ranking because of violence, not only by the Taliban and the warlords’ henchmen but also by government representatives. Burma’s position was already bad and now is worse (170th). The crackdown launched after the September 2007 protests never ended: dozens of journalists have been arrested or threatened, while the military censorship is relentless.

In Southeast Asia, Cambodia (126th) got a bad score as a result of a journalist’s murder that was probably instigated by a police officer, and the fact that control of the media was stepped up for the parliamentary elections. Vietnam (168th) fell six places as a result of a crackdown on the liberal media for being too probing in its reporting on corruption.

Major political changes took place in Pakistan (152nd) and Nepal (138th) but their effects on press freedom have not yet been felt. Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s departure as Pakistan’s president should benefit the press but the war with the Taliban is an even more serious problem for journalists.

The low ranking accorded to the United States outside of its own territory (119th) is due in part to the US military’s abuses in Afghanistan where a fixer for a Canadian TV network was arbitrarily detained for several months without any form of trial.

China (167th) continues to have a low ranking despite the efforts of many news media to elude the straightjacket of censorship and police controls. The number of arrests and cases of news surveillance and control by the political police and Propaganda Department is still very high and prevents the new Asian power from achieving any significant improvement.

Posted by Bangladesh Young Journalists Forum at 14:16:40 | Permalink | No Comments »

Saturday, October 18, 2008

MEDIA-PAKISTAN: Sexual Harassment - Routine for Women Journos


By Beena Sarwar

LAHORE, Oct 14 (IPS) - Pakistan’s mushrooming electronic media has transformed the political landscape in this South Asian nation where illiteracy bars some 60 percent of the people from reading newspapers. It has also thrown up new challenges for young people entering media, particularly women.

Most members of the Pakistan Association of Television Journalists (ATJ) are under 35 years old, according to Faysal Aziz Khan, 33, the Karachi-based secretary general of the association and reporter for Geo TV.

ATJ only has some 50 females among its 700 or so members around the country, but nearly half of them are concentrated in the business capital of Karachi. Women are highly visible in the Pakistani media as anchors and talk show hosts on dozens of private radio and television channels in various regional languages, besides English and Urdu.

Most identify sexual harassment as their biggest concern, according to Zebunnisa Burki, who has been coordinating South Asian Women in Media (SAWM) since the organisation was launched in April this year. National conferences have recently been held in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nepal.

“Practically every journalist who is here has a tale to tell,” she told IPS at the SAWM- Pakistan conference in Lahore, on Oct. 10-11. “I think our complaints cell will be the most active part of our association.”

“Oh dear,” responded Khan when IPS asked him to comment. He said he would put it on the agenda of the next ATJ council meeting. There are two women on the 17-member council, including one who was at the Lahore conference.

The second biggest issue that the 50 or so delegates identified at the conference was gender discrimination: they said that women are paid less than their male colleagues for equal work and have to fight harder for the political or other high profile assignments.

“These challenges are quite different from the ones we dealt with when we entered the profession in the 1980s,” veteran reporter Mariana Baabar of the daily The News told IPS. “These young women are amazingly confident and bold in taking on these issues. We had to fight our way up also, but most of our male colleagues actively supported and helped us.”

“We never even considered that we might be getting paid less than men for the same work,” she added. “Nor did we did face any kind of sexual harassment. But maybe the younger generation is more conscious of their rights than we were.”

The relatively newer issue of sexual harassment is linked with the age-old problem of gender discrimination, commented Rubina Jamil who heads the 22-year old Punjab-based Working Women’s Organisation (WWO).

WWO is among the civil society organisations which got together a few years ago to form Aasha, the Alliance Against Sexual Harassment (www.aasha.org.pk) in collaboration with the International Labor Organisation (ILO) and Pakistan’s Ministry of Women Development.

“I am so glad they are doing this,” a radio journalist in her early twenties told IPS. “I’ve been working since I was 17, and I am sick of producers offering to help me if I go out with them. I want my work to be taken on merit.”

Aasha developed a code of conduct for the workplace and a procedure to deal with harassment and discrimination. Geo TV, the largest private television network in Pakistan is among the few media organisations Aasha lists as a ‘progressive employer’.

“It’s not necessary for every case to be a federal issue,” commented a television producer who worked with Geo when Aasha started. “Often the tension arises because of the widespread gender segregation in our society — many of these youngsters don’t know how to interact with each other. This leads to misunderstandings that the code helps to clear up.”

Another reason for growing sexual harassment may be that, with education, more people are crossing class barriers.

“Women coming into journalism earlier were relatively well-connected and self-confident. Many now come from lower-middle class backgrounds and have less confidence. Men find it easier to take advantage of or intimidate them,” observed a senior journalist. “Women must be trained to refuse unwanted advances clearly rather than trying to be nice about it and making excuses that can be taken at face value.”

Aasha recommends that the person feeling harassed should keep notes about the time, date, place, and nature of the harassment.

“This helps establish a pattern and also provides the management with something to work with,” said the former Geo producer. “When we had a case of unwanted SMS messages and e-mails going to one young woman, she followed these steps. We were able to resolve the matter internally without embarrassing the people involved or making it public.”

”Let me tell you, the challenges that women face here are not that far off from media anywhere in the world,” said Saima Mohsin, a senior anchor at the English language Dawn News channel who came to Pakistan a year and a half ago from London, where she has worked with Sky TV, ITV and BBC.

“It has taken years for women in the West to achieve what women in Pakistan have managed in a short time,” she added. “Women are making a mark in the media industry here that has catapulted them into visibility everywhere. But are women taken seriously? Not without a fight.”

But issues of representation, harassment and discrimination pale into irrelevance for women journalists working in conflict areas, like Farzana Ali of Aaj TV in Peshawar in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) bordering Afghanistan.

“We have picked up the flesh of our own people with our own hands after a bomb blast,” Ali, the petite mother of an eight-year old boy, told conference participants in a chilling reminder of the unprecedented challenges that journalists — male and female — face in an era of unmitigated violence.

Source: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44251

Posted by Bangladesh Young Journalists Forum at 11:59:52 | Permalink | No Comments »

Saturday, October 11, 2008

GOVERNMENT CHALLENGED OVER TORTURE OF EDITOR IN SYLHET

10 October 2008

Reporters Without Borders today called on the interim government to order an investigation into torture and misuse of power against journalist Noor Ahmed in Sylhet, north-eastern Bangladesh.

The worldwide press freedom organisation was reacting to a just-released investigation report by human rights body Odhikar revealing that the journalist was arrested and tortured in 2007 by members of the Rapid Action Battalion in Sylhet.

The case recalls that of journalists Tasneem Khalil and Jahangir Alam Akash who were also arrested tortured by the security services in 2007.

Noor Ahmed, known as Ahmed Noor, editor of local daily Dainik Sylhet Protidin and general secretary of the Syleth Press Club, was arrested by members of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB 9), the Bangladesh elite crime force, on 7 April 2007, who blindfolded and bundled him into a truck.

Noor Ahmed told Odhikar that he was tortured several times. First of all he was beaten with a stick from his knees to his feet for 20 minutes. He was then questioned about his implication in a case of extortion and beaten each time he denied it.

After a night of physical and mental torture, he signed a paper which he was unable to read and was then taken to Sylhet police station.
 
“The information made public by Odhikar proves that Ahmed Noor had no involvement in the case against him. It is appalling that local officials, including those responsible for law and order, can attack journalists with complete impunity, Reporters Without Borders said.

“The authorities must not remain silent on this, particularly ahead of elections. The justice system must establish the truth and punish the perpetrators of this unacceptable act.”

Noor Ahmed was arrested at the same time as two other journalists, Sajol Daash, editor of the daily Dainik Khabor, and Apurbo Sharma, reporter on the daily Dainik Jugveri, on the same charges. During his interrogation, Sajol Daash apparently implicated Noor Ahmed.

He had hardly been cleared, when another complaint was made against Ahmed Noor by Jamal Uddin, assistant head of RAB 9, who accused him of fraud, extortion and working on a newspaper at the same time as for a public body. Noor was finally acquitted by the court and released on bail on 3 September 2007.

While he was in prison, RAB officers threatened to imprison him again if he returned to journalism on his release.
 
The editor of Dainik Sylhet Protidin believes he was charged because he was investigating RAB’s illegal activities and an allegation that Sylhet inspector general of police, M. Shahidullah, was taking bribes. He told Odhika that his arrest was intended to intimidate other journalists to dissuade them from publishing similar reports.

When his paper published report by Odhikar that was embarrassing for the authorities on 14 May 2007, RAB agents several times demanded the closure of the paper and threatened to harm Ahmed Noor, while still in prison, unless he shut it down.

Source:  Reporters Without Borders/Reporters sans frontières

Posted by Bangladesh Young Journalists Forum at 11:26:36 | Permalink | No Comments »