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2007 a bad year for journalists
13/02/2008 09:14  - (SA)  

  • Search is on for CBS journos
  • 9 die in Eritrean jail - media
  • TV crew killed in Iraq bombing
  • Two French journos get bail
  • Journos acid attack condemned
  • 134 journos killed in 2007
  • Journalists face death penalty
  • Eritrea worst place for journos
  • Washington - Iraq was the deadliest place for journalists last year, while China led the rest of the world in jailing members of the news media and cracking down on freedom of expression, a media rights group reports.

    Russia and Iran also took significant steps to muzzle the press, according to the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders.

    All told, 87 journalists were killed on the job in 2007.

    "More and more journalists are being killed and last year's figure was the highest since 1994," said the report.

    In Iraq, 47 journalists were killed - up from 41 in 2006. Other deadly countries for those in the media were Somalia and Pakistan, where eight and six journalists were killed, respectively.

    The group's annual report was to be released on Wednesday in Washington.

    In Iraq, most of the media workers killed covering the war were Iraqi journalists. A Russian photographer killed in a bomb explosion north of Baghdad was the lone foreign journalist, the report said. Twenty-five journalists were kidnapped. Most were freed unharmed. The group also cited the detention of Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein, who has been held by the US military without charges for 22 months.

    Ahead of the report's release, CBS News said on Monday that two of its journalists were missing in the predominantly Shi'ite southern city of Basra. The network did not identify the journalists, but said all efforts were being made to find them.

    Olympics won't change censorship

    The report said China remains the biggest censorship offender and jails the largest number of journalists, cyber-dissidents, Internet users and activists for freedom of expression. It has at least 31 journalists behind bars.

    Head researcher Jean-Francois Julliard says Reporters Without Borders is especially concerned about this summer's Olympic Games in China, where he maintains human rights conditions have greatly worsened.

    "There are more journalists detained in China now than there were when China was chosen in 2001 to host the games," Julliard said. "We have the feeling that nothing will really change before the Olympic Games."

    Julliard said more pressure needs to be put on the United States and European countries to place human rights ahead of economic interests and demand China ensure more freedoms ahead of the Beijing games in August.

    Iran, Pakistan, Russia

    In Iran, the group said, repression has increased, with more and more journalists being jailed. Over 50 journalists were put in prison last year; 10 remained imprisoned at the end of the year. The upcoming parliamentary elections in March are expected to see further restrictions on the press, the report said.

    Two other countries with elections, Pakistan and Russia, are also worrisome, said the group.



     
     

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