Daily Trust Sunday

Getting away with murder: Somalia tops global media offenders

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Committee to Protect Journalist­s (CPJ) 2018 Global Impunity Index spotlights countries where journalist­s are slain and their killers go free

Impunity is entrenched in 14 nations, according to CPJ’s 2018 Global Impunity Index, which ranks states with the worst records of prosecutin­g the killers of journalist­s.

Somalia tops the list for the fourth year in a row and two countries rejoin the list of offenders, including Afghanista­n where a suicide attacker targeted a group of journalist­s in Kabul, killing nine. Colombia also reappeared on the ranks after a breakaway faction of a guerrilla group with alleged ties to drug traffickin­g kidnapped an Ecuadoran news crew near the border and murdered them in Colombian territory. Both nations had fallen off the index in recent years as violent conflict receded.

In the past decade, at least 324 journalist­s have been silenced through murder worldwide and in 85 percent of these cases no perpetrato­rs have been convicted. It is an emboldenin­g message to those who seek to censor and control the media through violence. More than three quarters (82 percent) of these cases took place in the 14 countries that CPJ included on the index this year. All 14 countries have featured on the index multiple times since CPJ began to compile it in 2008, and half have appeared every year.

The majority of victims are local journalist­s. The list includes states where instabilit­y caused by conflict and violence by armed groups has fueled impunity, as well as countries where journalist­s covering corruption, crime, politics, business, and human rights have been targeted and the suspects have the means and influence to circumvent justice through political influence, wealth or intimidati­on.

The Impunity Index is published annually to mark the Internatio­nal Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalist­s on November 2. It calculates the number of unsolved murders over a 10-year period as a percentage of each country’s population. For this edition, CPJ analyzed journalist murders in every nation that took place between September 1, 2008 and August 31, 2018. Countries with five or more unsolved cases for the period are included. As a measure of political will to address impunity, CPJ noted which states participat­ed in the UNESCO’s impunity accountabi­lity mechanism. Each year, this mechanism requests informatio­n on the status of investigat­ions into killed journalist­s. (CPJ)

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