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Watchdog: Hostility toward journos rising worldwide

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PARIS -- Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders said hostility toward journalist­s is growing worldwide, often encouraged by political leaders — even in democratic countries.

The group’s annual global index of media freedom released Wednesday, April 25, found an overall rise in animosity toward reporters and a drop in freedoms, notably in former Soviet states but also in countries from the United States to the Philippine­s.

The group said many democratic­ally elected leaders “no longer see the media as part of democracy’s essential underpinni­ng,” singling out US President Donald Trump for his media-bashing. It also notes the recent killings of reporters in EU members Slovakia and Malta.

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said it was “ridiculous” to suggest that Trump or his administra­tion has halted freedom of the press.

“I think we’re one of the most accessible administra­tions that we’ve seen in decades,” Sanders said Wednesday. “I think by my mere presence of standing up here and taking your questions, unvetMANIL­A

ted, is a pretty good example of freedom of the press and I think it’s ridiculous to suggest otherwise.”

The media watchdog said authoritar­ian regimes are trying to “export their vision” that media should be compliant.

It said hate speech targeting journalist­s is amplified on social networks by government­friendly trolls in India, Russia and elsewhere. AP

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