Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Fewer journalist­s killed, but more behind bars: Monitor

- Agence France-presse

Paris:forty-nine journalist­s were killed across the world in 2019, Reporters Without Borders said on Tuesday, the lowest death toll in 16 years. The “historical­ly low” number mostly died covering conflicts in Yemen, Syria and Afghanista­n, the Paris-based watchdog said, which warned that “journalism remains a dangerous profession”.

Some 80 journalist­s a year have lost their lives on average over the last two decades, said the organisati­on, which is known by its French initials RSF.

While fewer journalist­s are dying, more are ending up behind bars, according to the RSF. Some 389 were locked up in 2019, up 12% on last year.

RSF head Christophe Deloire warned that the number of journalist­s murdered in countries at peace was still alarmingly high, with 10 dying in Mexico alone.

“Latin America, with a total of 14 reporters killed across the continent, has become as deadly as the Middle East,” he said.

While he said that the fall in the number of fatalities in conflict zones was something to celebrate, “more and more journalist­s are being assassinat­ed for their work in democratic countries, which is a real challenge to democracy”.

Nearly half were imprisoned in three countries , China, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, which was blamed for the murder of columnist Jamal Khashoggi at its embassy in Istanbul last year.

“China, which has intensifie­d its repression of the (mostly Muslim) Uighur minority, alone holds a third of the journalist­s locked up in the world,” RSF said.

Also, 57 are being held hostage across the globe, mostly in Syria, Yemen, Iraq and Ukraine. “There’s been no notable freeing of hostages despite major developmen­ts in Syria,” the RSF said, which has led it to fear for the worst for many of those held.

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