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UPDATE: Press Freedom ranked by country -- surprises!

 
 
Reply Mon 27 Oct, 2003 09:26 pm
Quote:
Reporters Without Borders is publishing its second world press freedom ranking. As in 2002, the most catastrophic situation is to be found in Asia, especially North Korea, Burma and Laos. Second from last in the ranking, Cuba is today the world's biggest prison for journalists. The United States and Italy were given relatively low rankings.


For the full report, explanations, and rankings, see:

http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=8247
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hobitbob
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Oct, 2003 09:52 pm
Not too surprised. Do you think this is because of the large conglomerates owning many newspapers in many places?
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Tartarin
 
  1  
Reply Tue 28 Oct, 2003 08:19 am
Sure, Hobit, but I also think it's the trend in the US towards entertainment vs. news, particularly news which runs counter to how-it-sposed-to-be. Violence attracts, so TV is now covering violence in Baghdad. See Frank Rich's essay in Sunday's NYTimes (I'll get a link)...
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Tartarin
 
  1  
Reply Tue 28 Oct, 2003 08:21 am
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/26/arts/26RICH.html
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nimh
 
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Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 04:31 pm
Not a lot of surprises there (though I confess having been unaware thus far of the near-perfect media freedom in Trinidad & Tobago ;-) ... but always interesting, definitely.

One result I'd highlight, considering the extent to which Putin still seems to be widely thought of as a promising democrat (not to mention the trust just looking into his eyes inspires):

Russia ranks 148th - even below Mugabe's beating-journalists-up regime in Zimbabwe, below Sudan, Somalia, Singapore, Yemen - and Iraq under US occupation. It does hardly better than the neo-communist dictatorship of Byelorussia's Lukashenka. Wake-up call anyone?
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Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 05:00 pm
Wake up to what, Nimh? What would you propose anyone do about Putin?
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 05:06 pm
The US Media
All one has to do is to read the foreign press (the non-US Media, I mean) to understand the massive failure of the US Media to protect the common good interests of ALL the nation's citizens. The Media has, for the most part, gotten lazy, become besotted with power and celebrity, and has lost its integrity as a slave to the bottom line.

BBB
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nimh
 
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Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 05:20 pm
Setanta - any of us or any of our politicians?

Our politicians: stop treating him like an ally. Stop - remember the Bush quote below?* - touting him as an honest, just, democratic leader.

Start acting on those Council of Europe, European Parliament resolutions on media and democracy in Russia instead of caving in at the smallest pressure.

Stop accepting and repeating his claims about Chechnya being merely Russia's own "war on terrorism". Set some conditions to do with media and democracy, along with the ones already in place on economic reform, before supporting his regime with any further million-dollar loans, investments on friendly terms.

Start giving at least symbolic recognition and support to democratic alternatives. Remember that even symbolic recognition from abroad can help prevent people from being harassed.

Any of us? At the very least - keep ourselves educated on the continuous erosion of democracy in Russia. I'm sure you know - but you'd be surprised how many otherwise reasonably well-informed Americans, Dutchmen, etc, still think of the Russian government in very favourable terms, of Russia as a budding democracy, imperfect but up on the right way ahead.

* (''I looked the man in the eye; I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy. ... I was able to get a sense of his soul. ... He's an honest, straightforward man who loves his country. We share a lot of values.'' - George W. Bush, June 16, 2001).
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nimh
 
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Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 05:35 pm
Similar country rankings of press freedom (with individual "country narratives" describing each country's context) are done by Freedom House (www.freedomhouse.org).

Could be interesting to compare the two lists, see where they are different.

You can find the FH publications on http://www.freedomhouse.org/research/pressurvey.htm - but only in PDF - I cant open PDF files on this PC (cant get Acrobat reinstalled somehow), so I cant quote from 'em now.
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fishin
 
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Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 06:39 pm
Interestingly enough nimh, the Freedom House report paints an entirely different picture.
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Craven de Kere
 
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Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 07:31 pm
nimh wrote:
but only in PDF - I cant open PDF files on this PC (cant get Acrobat reinstalled somehow), so I cant quote from 'em now.


nimh, I have Adobe installed but always do it this way if I can, click here. Go to page 22 for the list.
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nimh
 
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Reply Fri 31 Oct, 2003 08:05 pm
Thanks Craven, for the tip. I sometimes do it like that, too - but had just totally not come up with the idea this time round <slaps head>.

fishin' wrote:
Interestingly enough nimh, the Freedom House report paints an entirely different picture.


Yeh? That is interesting. I've just quickly skipped to the list - its a pity that the FH ranking doesnt actually number them one by one, but groups them together into categories - makes it hard to immediately compare.

But predictably, at least the same "black sheep" are at the very bottom: Burma, Cuba, N-Korea, Turkmenistan, Vietnam, Eritrea. Some of the same countries are on top, too: Finland, Iceland, Norway, Belgium, Sweden, Switzerland. No surprise there ;-).

Also - re: Russia - the FP survey, too, choosing between "free", "partly free" and "not free", labels Russia "not free", and it lumps it in the same category as Cambodia, Algeria, Ethiopia and Yemen.

(That would be number 125 to 151 out of 192 ... slightly better than being ranked 148th out of 166 as in the RSF list, but its still pretty much 3/4 down the list).

Just skimming through it, the article on Russia and Ukraine on p.53 looks interesting too.

What struck me in the RSF list, by the way, was that among the worst-scoring 10 countries, 6 are communist dictatorships (counting Turkmenistan). Not surprising - but still striking. Course, there doesnt seem to be a whole lot of far-right dictatorships, like you had in Chile, Argentine, Central America, around anymore nowadays ... whereas some of these communist dinosaurs just keep limping on ...

I wonder why the Netherlands end up so high in the RSF one and lower in the FH one. Perhaps its cause of the conglomeration ... lot of noise about that - justifiably! - in the US, UK - but here its nothing new. Of the five main national newspapers here, four are owned by the same company, PCM ... only the tabloid-style De Telegraaf is published independently.
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nimh
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 May, 2006 04:47 pm
For the record, this was the Freedom House Map of Press Freedom 2005; see here:

http://img113.imageshack.us/img113/4747/pressfreedommap2of.gif

And this is how Reporters Without Borders ranked the countries for 2005.

Top 10

1 Denmark 0,50
- Finland 0,50
- Iceland 0,50
- Ireland 0,50
- Netherlands 0,50
- Norway 0,50
- Switzerland 0,50
8 Slovakia 0,75
9 Czech Republic 1,00
- Slovenia 1,00

Interesting rankings in the middle

18 Germany 4,00
- Greece 4,00
21 Canada 4,50
- Lithuania 4,50
24 United Kingdom 5,17
25 Benin 5,50
28 El Salvador 5,75
30 France 6,25
31 Australia 6,50
33 Bosnia and Herzegovina 7,00
37 Japan 8,00
- Mali 8,00
40 Spain 8,33
41 Costa Rica 8,50
42 Italy 8,67
43 Macedonia 8,75
44 United States of America 9,50
47 Israel 10,00
48 Bulgaria 10,25
53 Poland 12,50
56 Croatia 12,83
62 Albania 14,17
63 Brazil 14,50
65 Serbia and Montenegro 14,83
70 Romania 16,17
71 Congo 17,00
90 Venezuela 23,00
97 Madagascar 24,50
98 Turkey 25,00
100 Kosovo 25,75
106 India 27,00
125 Afghanistan 39,17
126 Sierra Leone 39,50
135 Mexico 45,50
138 Russia 48,67
143 Egypt 52,00
150 Pakistan 60,75
154 Saudi Arabia 66,00
157 Iraq 67,00

Bottom 10:

158 Vietnam 73,25
159 China 83,00
160 Nepal 86,75
161 Cuba 87,00
162 Libya 88,75
163 Burma 88,83
164 Iran 89,17
165 Turkmenistan 93,50
166 Eritrea 99,75
167 North Korea 109,00
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 May, 2006 05:01 pm
well, look at that!
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nimh
 
  1  
Reply Thu 26 Oct, 2006 06:28 pm
Quote:
U.S. Rank on Press Freedom Slides Lower

Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Some poor countries, such as Mauritania and Haiti, improved their record in a global press freedom index this year, while France, the United States and Japan slipped further down the scale of 168 countries rated, the group Reporters Without Borders said yesterday. [..]

"Unfortunately nothing has changed in the countries that are the worst predators of press freedom, and journalists in North Korea, Eritrea, Turkmenistan, Cuba, Burma and China are still risking their life or imprisonment for trying to keep us informed," the organization said in a news release. North Korea holds the worst ranking at 168.

Iran ranks 162nd, between Saudi Arabia and China. The report said [..] that Russia continued to steadily dismantle the independent media and that the recent slaying of investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya "is a poor omen for the coming year."

Northern European countries top the index, with no reported censorship, threats, intimidation or physical reprisals, either by officials or the public, in Finland, Ireland, Iceland and the Netherlands. [..]

Although it ranked 17th on the first list, published in 2002, the United States now stands at 53, having fallen nine places since last year. [..]

Lucie Morillon, the organization's Washington representative, said the index is based on responses to 50 questions about press freedom asked of journalists, free press organizations, researchers, human rights activists and others. [..]


This is what the RWB press release says - note the strikingly good news from Bosnia Exclamation :

Quote:
North Korea, Turkmenistan, Eritrea the worst violators of press freedom

France, the United States and Japan slip further
Mauritania and Haiti gain much ground


New countries have moved ahead of some Western democracies in the fifth annual Reporters Without Borders Worldwide Press Freedom Index, issued today, while the most repressive countries are still the same ones. [..]

"Each year new countries in less-developed parts of the world move up the Index to positions above some European countries or the United States. This is good news and shows once again that, even though very poor, countries can be very observant of freedom of expression. Meanwhile the steady erosion of press freedom in the United States, France and Japan is extremely alarming," Reporters Without Borders said.

The three worst violators of free expression - North Korea, bottom of the Index at 168th place, Turkmenistan (167th) and Eritrea (166th) - have clamped down further. The torture death of Turkmenistan journalist Ogulsapar Muradova shows that the country's leader, "President-for-Life" Separmurad Nyazov, is willing to use extreme violence against those who dare to criticise him. Reporters Without Borders is also extremely concerned about a number of Eritrean journalists who have been imprisoned in secret for more than five years. [..]

Deterioration in the United States and Japan, with France also slipping

The United States (53rd) has fallen nine places since last year, after being in 17th position in the first year of the Index, in 2002. Relations between the media and the Bush administration sharply deteriorated after the president used the pretext of "national security" to regard as suspicious any journalist who questioned his "war on terrorism." The zeal of federal courts which, unlike those in 33 US states, refuse to recognise the media's right not to reveal its sources, even threatens journalists whose investigations have no connection at all with terrorism.

Freelance journalist and blogger Josh Wolf was imprisoned when he refused to hand over his video archives. Sudanese cameraman Sami al-Haj, who works for the pan-Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera, has been held without trial since June 2002 at the US military base at Guantanamo, and Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein has been held by US authorities in Iraq since April this year.

France (35th) slipped five places during the past year, to make a loss of 24 places in five years. The increase in searches of media offices and journalists' homes is very worrying for media organisations and trade unions. Autumn 2005 was an especially bad time for French journalists, several of whom were physically attacked or threatened during a trade union dispute involving privatisation of the Corsican firm SNCM and during violent demonstrations in French city suburbs in November.

Rising nationalism and the system of exclusive press clubs (kishas) threatened democratic gains in Japan, which fell 14 places to 51st. The newspaper Nihon Keizai was firebombed and several journalists phsyically attacked by far-right activists (uyoku).

Fallout from the row over the "Mohammed cartoons"

Denmark (19th) dropped from joint first place because of serious threats against the authors of the Mohammed cartoons published there in autumn 2005. For the first time in recent years in a country that is very observant of civil liberties, journalists had to have police protection due to threats against them because of their work.

Yemen (149th) slipped four places, mainly because of the arrest of several journalists and closure of newspapers that reprinted the cartoons. Journalists were harassed for the same reason in Algeria (126th), Jordan (109th), Indonesia (103rd) and India (105th).

But except for Yemen and Saudi Arabia (161st), all the Arab peninsula countries considerably improved their rank. Kuwait (73rd) kept its place at the top of the group, just ahead of the United Arab Emirates (77th) and Qatar (80th).

Newcomers to the top ranks

Two countries moved into the Index's top 20 for the first time. Bolivia (16th) was best-placed among less-developed countries and during the year its journalists enjoyed the same level of freedom as colleagues in Canada or Austria. Bosnia-Herzegovina (19th) continued its gradual rise up the Index since the end of the war in ex-Yugoslavia and is now placed above its European Union member-state neighbours Greece (32nd) and Italy (40th).

Ghana (34th) rose 32 places to become fourth in Africa behind the continent's three traditional leaders - Benin (23rd), Namibia (26th) and Mauritius (32nd). Economic conditions are still difficult for the Ghanaian media but it is no longer threatened by the authorities.

Panama (39th) is enjoying political peace which has helped the growth of a free and vigorous media and the country moved up 27 places over the year.

War, the destroyer of press freedom

Lebanon has fallen from 56th to 107th place in five years, as the country's media continues to suffer from the region's poisonous political atmosphere, with a series of bomb attacks in 2005 and Israeli military attacks this year. The Lebanese media - some of the freest and most experienced in the Arab world - desperately need peace and guarantees of security. [..]

Things are much the same in Sri Lanka, which ranked 51st in 2002, when there was peace, but has now sunk to 141st because fighting between government and rebel forces has resumed in earnest. Dozens of Tamil journalists have been physically attacked after being accused by one side or the other of being biased against them.

Press freedom in Nepal (159th) has shifted according to the state of the fighting that has disrupted the country for several years. The "democatic revolution" and the revolt against the monarchy in April this year led immediately to more basic freedoms and the country should gain a lot of ground in next year's Index.

Welcome changes of regime

Changes of ruler are sometimes good for press freeedom, as in the case of Haiti, which has risen from 125th to 87th place in two years after the flight into exile of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in early 2004. Several murders of journalists remain unpunished but violence against the media has abated.

Togo (66th) has risen 29 places since the death of President Gnassingbe Eyadema in February 2005, the accession to power of his son and internationally-backed efforts to make peace with the opposition.

A coup in Mauritania in August 2005 ended the heavy censorship of the local media and the country has risen to 77th position after being 138th in 2004, one of the biggest improvements in the Index.


It's certainly becoming an ever more eclectically ordered ranking:

Top 9

1 Finland 0,50
- Iceland 0,50
- Ireland 0,50
- Netherlands 0,50
5 Czech Republic 0,75
6 Estonia 2,00
- Norway 2,00
8 Slovakia 2,50
- Switzerland 2,50

Interesting rankings in the middle

16 Bolivia 4,50
16 Canada 4,50
19 Bosnia and Herzegovina 5,00
19 Denmark 5,00
19 New-Zealand 5,00
23 Benin 5,50
23 Germany 5,50
27 Lithuania 6,50
27 United Kingdom 6,50
35 Australia 9,00
35 Bulgaria 9,00
35 France 9,00
35 Mali 9,00
39 Panama 9,50
40 Italy 9,90
41 El Salvador 10,00
41 Spain 10,00
45 Mozambique 11,50
45 Serbia and Montenegro 11,50
50 Israel 12,00
51 Japan 12,50
53 Botswana 13,00
53 Croatia 13,00
53 United States of America 13,00
58 Hong-Kong 14,00
58 Poland 14,00
58 Romania 14,00
70 Kosovo 16,00
70 Lesotho 16,00
73 Kuwait 17,00
75 Brazil 17,17
76 Argentina 17,30
80 Albania 18,00
84 Liberia 19,00
85 Moldova 19,17
89 Georgia 21,00
97 Morocco 24,83
98 Turkey 25,00
103 Indonesia 26,00
103 Sierra Leone 26,00
105 India 26,50
105 Ukraine 26,50
115 Venezuela 29,00
128 Kazakhstan 41,00
130 Afghanistan 44,25
131 Colombia 44,75
132 Mexico 45,83
134 Palestinian Authority 46,75
140 Zimbabwe 50,00
144 Somalia 51,25
147 Russia 52,50
151 Belarus 57,00
152 Libya 62,50
153 Syria 63,00
154 Iraq 66,83
157 Pakistan 70,33
158 Uzbekistan 71,00

Bottom 9

160 Ethiopia 75,00
161 Saudi Arabia 76,00
162 Iran 90,88
163 China 94,00
164 Burma 94,75
165 Cuba 95,00
166 Eritrea 97,50
167 Turkmenistan 98,50
168 North Korea 109,00
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