Eritrea ranked media’s worst enemy

Watchdog body says Iceland, Norway and Estonia provide journalists the most liberty.

korean summit
North Korea was ranked the secondworst offender [AFP]

It was the first time Eritrea had reached the bottom spot on the list, compiled by the Paris-based media watchdog and its network of more than 100 correspondents, legal experts and human rights activists worldwide.

 

“The privately owned press has been banished by the authoritarian President Issaias Afeworki and the few journalists who dare to criticise the regime are sent off to prison camps,” the RSF said.

 

It noted that four imprisoned journalists in Eritrea, a tiny Horn of Africa nation, have died in detention.

 

Unimpressive US

 

The United States gained ground slightly for the first time since Reporters Without Borders began compiling the list five years ago, coming in at number 48, behind Nicaragua and Cyprus.

 

In the index’s first year, 2002, the United States was in 17th place, but steadily declined in ensuing years because of limits on journalists linked to the war in Iraq and anti-terrorism policies. Last year it was at number 53.

 

Repressive governments are increasingly targeting bloggers, the group said, noting that at least 64 people are currently imprisoned worldwide because of what they posted on the internet.

 

Most are in China, ranked 163rd in a list of 169 nations.

 

War was a key reason for violations of media freedoms, the group said, noting hostage-takings in the Palestinian territories and fighting in Somalia and Sri Lanka that hurt their rankings.

  

The group expressed alarm at worsening conditions in Myanmar, where the ruling millitary government has cracked down on opposition demonstrations led by Buddhist monks. 

 

Media freedom has not improved in Russia, ranked 144th, RSF said, blaming failure to punish those responsible for murdering journalists and limited diversity in the media.

Source: News Agencies