PRESS RELEASE - INTERNATIONAL
28 November 2006
WAN releases half-year review of press freedom
SOURCE: World Association of Newspapers (WAN), Paris
(WAN/IFEX) - The following is a 27 November 2006 WAN press release:
Kiev, Ukraine, 27 November 2006
2006: A Year of Living Dangerously
One hundred and five journalists were killed in 2006, the deadliest year on record, according to the half-year review of
press freedom by the World Association of Newspapers.
The report, presented Monday to the Board of the Paris-based WAN, meeting in Kiev, Ukraine, said that the killings
accelerated in the second half of the year, when 71 were killed. The number of journalists killed in Iraq - 23 since
June - surpassed all other countries.
The murder of journalists is the ultimate form of censorship, but by no means the only form. "Legislative measures,
financial harassment and security laws continue to be used as means to harass journalists and limit press freedom," said
the report. "Self-censorship, a natural response to repression and the threat of violence or death, is an endemic
problem in Central Asia, Latin America and the Middle East."
The full report can be read at http://www.wan-press.org/article12552.html . The list of journalists killed, with details
about their cases, can be found at http://www.wan-press.org/rubrique863.html
Region by region, the report said:
MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
Conflict and political instability throughout the Middle East and North Africa continue to undermine the ability of
press freedom to make serious advances in the region. Increasing violence and insecurity in Iraq have once again made
the country the most dangerous environment in the world for media practitioners, and the war between Lebanon and Israel
cost the lives of two media employees in July of this year. In Algeria, Morocco and Egypt, arguably the most tolerant
environments for journalists in the region, the governments rely on criminal defamation laws as a means to exert
pressure and control on the media.
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Africa's media and its journalists face manifold threats: war, lack of infrastructure and funding, censorship,
harassment, criminalizing media laws, and violence. Additionally, attackers, harassers, and murderers of journalists
have largely acted with impunity on the continent, thus contributing to continuing the cycle of violence. Despite this
gloomy picture, improvements have been noted; for example, the abolition of censorship in Mauritania. And African media
continue a praiseworthy battle in a media environment that imposes substantial challenges with regards to
infrastructure, legal aspects and widespread illiteracy.
THE AMERICAS
In the Americas, 15 journalists have been killed in a series of ruthless murders over the past six months. Other press
freedom concerns have been mainly of a legal character, prompting calls for greater freedom of expression in Brazil,
Bolivia and Peru. More than 20 journalists continue to linger in prison in Cuba.
EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA
The region covering the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe is one of stark contrasts when it comes to the state of
press freedom. Countries such as Ukraine and those in Eastern Europe have shown steady progress in the fifteen years
since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Press freedom in Belarus and the Central Asian countries of Kazakhstan,
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan has declined considerably in recent years, and the past few months have proved no different.
Russia is characterized by a complex and often contradictory media environment.
ASIA
Asia's press freedom record continues to be largely influenced by the repressive governments of Burma, China and North
Korea. As the political situation in Afghanistan deteriorates, journalists are among the latest victims. A number of
killings have occurred across the region, contributing to the overall high number of journalists killed this year in the
world.
The Paris-based WAN, the global organisation for the newspaper industry, defends and promotes press freedom world-wide.
It represents 18,000 newspapers; its membership includes 73 national newspaper associations, newspapers and newspaper
executives in 102 countries, 11 news agencies and nine regional and world-wide press groups.
Ends