Killing journalists
>> Saturday, January 28, 2017
The worldwide decline in journalist killings last year is
not encouraging at all, the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said,
after releasing its annual worldwide round-up on journalists.
In the Philippines, the latest killing
was of Mario Cantaoi who was shot in Magsingal, Ilocos Sur on Jan. 6. Cantaoi
was a professor of University of Northern Philippines and former reporter of church-owned DZNS
radio station in Vigan City. As an environmentalist, he had been critical of
some government officials. His killing is unsolved.
RSF said it was saddened to report that
at least 74 professional and non-professional journalists have been killed in
connection with their work in 2016.
Some were killed while out reporting.
Most were clearly deliberately targeted victims of deadly violence.
This is fewer than in 2015, when 101
journalists were killed.
“But the fall is not encouraging
because it is due largely to the fact many journalists have fled countries that
became too dangerous, especially Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Afghanistan and
Burundi,” the press freedom watchdog said. “These exoduses have
created news and information black holes, where impunity reigns.”
“The fall is also the result of the terror
imposed by press freedom predators, who close media outlets arbitrarily and gag
journalists,” the RSF explained. “Regardless of their courage, journalists
in countries, such as Mexico, censor themselves in an attempt to avoid being
murdered.”
Of countries not at war, Mexico was the
deadliest for journalists in 2016, with a total of nine killed, the media
monitor said.
Worldwide, nearly three quarters of the
journalists killed in 2016 were deliberately murdered.
In Afghanistan, all of the 10 journalists who were killed
this year were deliberately targeted because of their profession, the RSF
reported. Seven of them, it said, died in a suicide attack in January on a
minibus used by privately owned Tolo TV, an attack claimed by the Taliban.
Journalists were also hunted down and
slain in Yemen, records from the RSF showed.
The group has condemned “the impunity enjoyed by those
who murder journalists and the complicit lack of action by many governments
that are often only too ready themselves to trample on media freedom.”
“The violence against journalists is
more and more deliberate,” RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire said. “They
are clearly being targeted and murdered because they are journalists. This
alarming situation reflects the glaring failure of the international
initiatives aimed at protecting them, and is a death warrant for independent
reporting in those areas, where all possible means are used to impose
censorship and propaganda, especially by fundamentalist groups in the Middle
East.”
“So that international law can be
enforced, the UN must establish a concrete mechanism for implementing
resolutions. With the arrival of a new UN secretary-general Antonio
Guterres, a special representative for the protection of journalists must be
appointed as a matter of urgency,” the RSF said.
Syria, it added, continues to be the
world’s deadliest place for journalists, followed by Afghanistan.
Worldwide, two thirds of the journalists killed this year
were in war zones, the RSF reported. Almost all of them, it noted, were local
journalists, now that news organizations are increasingly reluctant to send
their reporters to dangerous hotspots abroad.
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