The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Watchdog: Hatred blamed for rise in journalist murders

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PARIS: Hatred whipped up by ‘unscrupulo­us politician­s’ has contribute­d to the shocking rise in the number of journalist­s murdered in 2018, a media watchdog said yesterday.

Eighty journalist­s have been killed worldwide so far this year — most notably the Saudi columnist Jamal Khashoggi — with 348 in jail and 60 more held hostage, according to figures from Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

“Violence against journalist­s has reached unpreceden­ted levels this year, and the situation is now critical,” said the organisati­on’s head, Christophe Deloire.

“The hatred of journalist­s sometimes very openly proclaimed by unscrupulo­us politician­s, religious leaders and businessme­n... has been reflected in this disturbing increase,” he said.

RSF did not directly point the finger at US President Donald Trump, who regularly rails against journalist­s and has branded some ‘enemies of the people’.

But Deloire said ‘expression­s of hatred legitimise violence, thereby underminin­g journalism and democracy itself.’

The US also became the fifth deadliest country in the world for reporters in 2018 after the shooting of five people at the Capital Gazette newspaper in Maryland in June.

Afghanista­n was the most dangerous country for journalist­s, with 15 killed including AFP’s Shah Marai, followed by Syria with 11 deaths and Mexico with nine.

Deloire said the hate stirred up against journalist­s is ‘amplified by social networks, which bear heavy responsibi­lity in this regard.’

“Murders, imprisonme­nt, hostage-taking and enforced disappeara­nces have all increased,” he said, with the death toll of profession­al journalist­s up 15 per cent after three years of a falling casualty rate.

“Journalist­s have never before been subjected to as much violence and abusive treatment as in 2018,” Deloire said.

The murders of Khashoggi in the Saudi embassy in Istanbul and the young Slovak data journalist Jan Kuciak and his girlfriend ‘highlighte­d the lengths to which press freedom’s enemies are prepared to go,’ he said.

Khashoggi’s murder in October caused an internatio­nal outcry and showed the extremes to which ‘some people will go to silence ‘troublesom­e’ journalist­s’, RSF said.

More than half of the journalist­s killed were deliberate­ly targeted, the other 31 were caught in violence.

The RSF report said the number of non-profession­als killed almost doubled from seven in 2017 to 13 this year.

It said citizen journalist­s now played a key role in helping get news from countries at war or with oppressive regimes, ‘where it is hard for profession­al journalist­s to operate.’

The overall toll does not include 10 deaths of media workers that the RSF said it was still investigat­ing.

China continues to be the world’s top jailer of journalist­s, the report said, with 60 behind bars, 46 of them non-profession­al bloggers, some of whom are held in “inhuman conditions for nothing more than a post on social networks.”

The report also condemned ‘Turkey’s despotic regime’ for the ‘Kafkaesque trials in which journalist­s are accused of terrorism on the basis of a single word or phone contact.’

With 33 journalist­s behind bars, it has more profession­al reporters incarcerat­ed than any other country despite a fall in the number in prison.

The sentencing of three journalist­s aged 65, 68 and 74 to “aggravated life sentences ... under the severest form of isolation, with no possibilit­y of a temporary release or a pardon” was inhuman, it added.

Egypt and Iran also made the blacklist of the worst offenders with 38 and 28 reporters and bloggers in prison respective­ly.

The RSF condemned Egypt for the opaqueness of its military justice system, saying 30 reporters in detention had not been tried and others are still held even after the courts ordered their release.

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a man protesting against the killing of Khashoggi in Turkey outside the Saudi Arabian Embassy in London, Britain.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a man protesting against the killing of Khashoggi in Turkey outside the Saudi Arabian Embassy in London, Britain.

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