Ethiopia drops ten places to 137th in Press Freedom
Ethiopia (137th) fell ten places because
of its repressive application of the 2009 anti-terrorist law and the
continued detention of several local journalists.
EAST AFRICA STAGNATES NEAR BOTTOM OF THE INDEX, MALI NOSEDIVES East Africa: journalists’ graveyard
Source: RSF
Source: RSF
In Somalia (175th, -11) 18 journalists
were killed, caught up in bomb attacks or the direct targets of murder,
making 2012 the deadliest in history for the country’s media. The Horn
of Africa state was the second most dangerous country in the world for
those working in news and information, behind Syria. In Eritrea (in last
place in the index for the sixth successive year), no journalists were
killed but some were left to die, which amounts to the same thing. With
at least 30 behind bars, it is Africa’s biggest prison for journalists.
Of 11 incarcerated since 2001, seven have died as a result of prison
conditions or have killed themselves. Since the independent media were
abolished more than 10 years ago, there are no independent Eritrean news
outlets, other than outside the country, and terror prevails.
East Africa is also a region of
censorship and crackdowns. Omar al-Bashir’s Sudan, where more newspapers
were seized and the arrests of journalists continued during the summer,
is stuck firmly in 170th place, in the bottom 10 of the index. Djibouti
(167th, -8), which also has no independent media, detained a
correspondent of the foreign-based news site La Voix de Djibouti.
Despite the release of two Swedish journalists arrested in 2011,
Ethiopia (137th) fell ten places because of its repressive application
of the 2009 anti-terrorist law and the continued detention of several
local journalists.
Political unrest in Mali and the Central African Republic
Mali (99th, -74), which was long
presented as the continent’s star performer in democracy and press
freedom, was prey to the political events that overtook it during the
year. The military coup in Bamako on 22 March and the seizure of the
north of the country by Touareg separatists and Islamic fundamentalists
exposed news organizations to censorship and abuses. Many northern radio
stations stopped broadcasting, while in the capital several Malian and
foreign journalists were assaulted. All these occurred before the
external military intervention in January 2013.
The Central African Republic was ranked
65th in 2012. Events after the outbreak of the Seleka rebellion at the
very end of the year (radio stations ransacked, one journalist killed)
were not taken into consideration in this index, thus preventing the
country from falling more than 50 places. These will be included in the
2014 version. In Guinea-Bissau (92nd, -17) a media blackout and military
censorship that followed the coup on 12 April explain that country’s
drop.
Africa’s predatory censors
Yahya Jammeh, King Mswati III, Paul
Kagame, and Teodoro Obiang Nguema, together with other heads of state
such as Issaias Afeworki (Eritrea) and Ismael Omar Guelleh (Djibouti)
are members of an exclusive club of authoritarian African leaders, some
eccentric others stern, who hold their countries in an iron grasp and
keep a firm grip on news and information. Their countries, respectively
Gambia (152nd), Swaziland (155th), Rwanda (161st) and Equatorial Guinea
(166th), are all among the bottom 30 in the index. Media pluralism has
been whittled away and criticism of the head of state discouraged.
The biggest losses
Chad, which fell 18 places to 121st, saw
journalists harassed and roughed up, the publication of the newspaper
N’Djamena Bi-Hebdo temporarily halted and its publisher sentenced to a
suspended prison term, and a highly repressive bill kept under wraps.
The slow but sure progress that followed the formation of a national
unity government in Zimbabwe (133rd, -16) in 2009 and the granting of
publication licences to several independent newspapers appeared to have
stalled. Violence and arrests of journalists still niggle and if
elections go ahead as planned in 2013, the atmosphere for the media
promises to be tense. Relatively high placed in 2011-2012, South Sudan
(124th) fell 12 places after the murder of a columnist – the first
killing of its kind in the new country – as news organizations and
journalists awaited the approval of three new laws on the media.
Despite the holding of a national media
conference in Cameroon (120th, -23), the future of the sector remains
both uncertain and worrying. In the upper reaches of the index, Niger
(43rd) nonetheless fell 14 places as a result of the irresponsibility of
a few journalists who succumbed to the temptation to abuse the freedom
that they enjoyed. Within the space of four months in Tanzania (70th,
-36), one journalist was killed while he was covering a demonstration
and another was found dead, a clear victim of murder.
Burundi (132nd) fell only two places but
remains a low position. Summonses of journalists declined but the case
of Hassan Ruvakuki, given a life sentence reduced to three years on
appeal, has created an atmosphere of fear among the media.
Return to normality
After a dreadful year in 2011, marked by
the dictatorial behaviour of the late President Bingu Wa Mutharika, a
violent crackdown on demonstrations and the murder of the blogger Robert
Chasowa, Malawi (75th) recorded the biggest jump in the entire index,
up 71 places, close to the position it held in 2010. Similarly, Cote
d’Ivoire rose 63 places to 96th despite persistent problems. It had
plummeted in the previous index because of a post-election crisis and
the murders of a journalist and another media worker, as well as the
civil conflict that broke out in Abidjan in April. Uganda (104th) was up
35 places thanks to a better year, but things were far from
satisfactory as far as the media were concerned. The year ended with
President Yoweri Museveni making open threats to several radio stations.
Promising gains
For Senegal (59th, +16), 2012 was a year
of hope. The presidential election took place in a peaceful atmosphere
for the media, despite a few regrettable assaults on journalists, and
President Macky Sall, who had declared himself willing to decriminalize
press offences, took office. Much remains to be proved in 2013, as was
illustrated by the prison sentence handed down on a journalist in
December.
In Liberia (97th, +13), the presidential
election in November 2011 had been tainted by the closure of several
media outlets and attacks on journalists. In 2012, the atmosphere
improved greatly. In the summer, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf became
the second African head of state, after Mahamadou Issoufou of Niger, to
sign the Declaration of Table Mountain, thereby undertaking to promote
media freedom.
Namibia (19th), Cape Verde (25th) and Ghana (30th) maintained their record as the highest ranked African countries.
No comments:
Post a Comment