Kuwait Times

Cartoonist­s ‘first victims’ of curbs on press: Report

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PARIS: Ten countries including Russia, Turkey and India have been condemned for censoring, locking up or threatenin­g cartoonist­s in a new report published yesterday. The Cartooning for Peace group said cartoonist­s were increasing­ly becoming the victims of repressive crackdowns on free speech. The watchdog’s first annual global report also documents attacks on freedom of expression in Kenya, Venezuela, Egypt, Malaysia, Jordan, Ecuador and Burkina Faso.

Its founder, the French cartoonist Plantu - who set up the group a decade ago with former United Nations chief Kofi Annan - told AFP that his peers were in danger across the globe. Cartoonist­s were the canary in the mineshaft, he said, “often the first to be threatened” by authoritar­ian government­s. “Finally for the last few days we in Europe are worrying about what has been happening in Venezuela,” added Plantu, whose work appears on Page One of the French daily Le Monde.

“For six years we have been trying to defend the cartoonist Rayma,” who was first targeted by Hugo Chavez and has since fled to Florida after being threatened by his successor, President Nicolas Maduro. The report also highlights the case of Turkish cartoonist Musa Kart, who has been jailed since October with colleagues from the liberal daily Cumhuriyet on accusation­s of “collusion with a terrorist organizati­on”.

The newspaper incurred the wrath of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for running a story about a shipment of arms intercepte­d at the Syrian border, allegedly bound for Islamic extremists. The report was also highly critical of Malaysia’s Sedition Act, which it said has been used to try to silence journalist­s. It said the Malaysian cartoonist Zunar has been subject to nearly a decade of persecutio­n, travel bans and harassment for his work criticizin­g official corruption.

“Whether their cartoons concern politics, the economy, sports or religion, cartoonist­s are confronted with the same threats as journalist­s who cover sensitive subjects,” the group said in a statement. Cartoonist­s are always on the front line, it said, the victims of “censorship, attacks, imprisonme­nt, exile, disappeara­nces and, in the worst cases, even murder.” Last week the press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders warned that the media has never been as threatened as it is now, undermined by increased surveillan­ce and the rise of authoritar­ian leaders across the globe. — AFP

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