Watchdog says press freedom in decline in 'new era of propaganda'
Watchdog says press freedom in decline in 'new era of
propaganda'
By Fran Blandy April 20, 2016
Paris (AFP) - World press freedom deteriorated in 2015,
especially in the Americas, advocacy group Reporters Without Borders said
Wednesday as it released its annual rankings, warning of "a new era of
propaganda".
The World Press Freedom Index ranks 180 countries on
indicators such as media independence, self-censorship, the rule of law,
transparency and abuses.
This year's report warned of a climate of fear that has
seen world leaders "developing a form of paranoia about legitimate
journalism."
Christophe Deloire, secretary general of the Paris-based
group told AFP there had been a decline in all parts of the world, with Latin
America of particular concern.
"All of the indicators show a deterioration.
Numerous authorities are trying to regain control of their countries, fearing
overly open public debate," he said.
"Today, it is increasingly easy for powers to appeal
directly to the public through new technologies, and so there is a greater
degree of violence against those who represent independent information,"
he added.
"We are entering a new era of propaganda where new
technologies allow the low-cost dissemination of their own communication, their
information, as dictated. On the other side, journalists are the ones who get
in the way."
The situation was particularly grave in Latin America,
the report said, highlighting "institutional violence" in Venezuela
and Ecuador, organised crime in Honduras, impunity in Colombia, corruption in
Brazil and media concentration in Argentina as the main obstacles to press
freedom.
Among the lowest ranked countries were Syria, at 177th
place out of 180, just below China (176th) but above North Korea (179th) and
last placed Eritrea.
Japan slumped to 72nd due to what the watchdog identified
as self-censorship towards Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, while Finland retained
its top spot for the sixth consecutive year, followed by the Netherlands and
Norway.
- Europe on 'downhill course' -
While Europe remained the region with the most press
freedom, Reporters Without Borders warned that the misuse of counter-terrorist
and counter-espionage measures and conflicts of interest had put it on "a
downhill course".
Poland fell a massive 29 places to 49th due to government
seeking to restore Polish ownership of foreign owned Polish media.
And France dropped seven places to 45th because
"most of the private-sector national media are now owned by a handful of
businessmen with interests in areas of the economy unrelated to the
media."
In Europe threats to journalists were linked to rising
nationalism which saw death threats in Sweden, which dropped three places to
8th , and attacks on journalists during anti-Muslim rallies in Germany (which
dropped four spots to 16).
"And finally, it was in Paris that the attack on
Charlie Hebdo took place on 7 January 2015, an attack masterminded from Yemen.
So, Europe was also the victim of the world’s demons," read the report.
- Namibia shines in Africa -
In Africa a series of political crises and terrorism
continued to erode press freedom.
South Sudan dropped 15 places to 140th due to
intimidation of journalists during its civil war.
Efforts by presidents to stay in power in the Republic of
Congo (115), Uganda (102) and Djibouti (172) "led to pre-election violence
against journalists and harsh, government-orchestrated censorship of the
media."
"As a result of the president’s obstinacy in Burundi
(156th), the leading independent media were destroyed, more than 100
journalists fled abroad and Burundi fell 11 places in the Index," said the
report.
The threat of jihadist groups in Mali -- where one group
threatened to behead foreign journalists -- and Nigeria, led to a decline in
press freedom in both countries.
In a glowing example of press freedom in Africa, Namibia
was the continent's best-ranked country at number 17.
"Its journalists are safe, its media landscape is
diverse and no restrictions are placed on the Internet."
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