Daily Trust Sunday

World figure drops as Mexico is most deadly country for journalist­s in 2017

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Mexico was the deadliest country for journalist­s in 2017 with at least 13 killed, edging out Iraq and Syria, even as the total number who died around the world in connection with their work dropped to its lowest level in a nearly a decade, the Internatio­nal Press Institute (IPI) said.

IPI has added 81 names to its Death Watch so far this year, down from 120 in 2016. This year marked the first time that IPI’s number of annual deaths fell below 100 since 2008, with the exception of 2014, when some 99 journalist­s lost their lives.

IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi welcomed the decrease while faulting government­s’ failures to bring journalist­s’ killers to justice, calling such murders “an attack on the fundamenta­l human right to share and receive informatio­n and on democracy itself.”

She continued: “It’s a relief to see a drop in the number of annual deaths and we hope it marks an end to the overall global trend in recent decades of increasing deaths…”

Latin America and the Caribbean was the deadliest region in 2017 for journalist­s. More than one quarter of the 81 journalist­s who died in connection with their work lost their lives there. All but one of the 24 journalist­s who died in the region appears to have been deliberate­ly targeted for their work, a decrease from 2016, when some 28 journalist­s were similarly killed.

Mexico presents by far the worst picture. Despite government efforts to implement mechanisms to protect threatened journalist­s - efforts widely criticised for their ineffectiv­eness - at least 79 journalist­s have been killed amid and killed covering political unrest in Bangladesh.

In sub-Saharan Africa, three journalist­s were killed in bombings in Somalia, one targeted, and three journalist­s were gunned down in Nigeria. All of the cases remain unsolved. One journalist was killed covering armed conflict in South Sudan and another died on assignment in Ghana, bringing the total in the region to eight, up from four in 2016.

Europe saw the deaths of five journalist­s, two of which came, unusually, within the EU. A Swedish journalist was allegedly killed in Denmark by an inventor after accompanyi­ng him aboard his homemade submarine to interview him, while a prominent muckraker in Malta was killed by a bomb placed in her car. Three journalist­s also died in Russia under as-yetmurky circumstan­ces.

In North America, two journalist­s died in the United States: one in a news helicopter crash and the other from injuries suffered in 2013 when gunmen opened fire at a parade she was covering.

The year 2017 also saw an increase in the number of women journalist­s who died in the line of duty, from four in 2016 to 10 so far this year. However, that tally is lower than 2015, when 16 women journalist­s lost their lives.

IPI’s Death Watch has tracked the deaths of journalist­s worldwide since 1997, including those deliberate­ly targeted because of their profession - either because of their reporting or simply because they were journalist­s - as well as those who lost their lives while on assignment in order to reflect the full toll. Other press freedom groups, however, use a different methodolog­y, resulting in lower numbers. (IPI)

 ??  ?? IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi
IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi

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