Texarkana Gazette

Media group: 81 reporters died, threats soared in 2017

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BRUSSELS—At least 81 reporters were killed doing their jobs this year, while violence and harassment against media staff has skyrockete­d, the world’s biggest journalist­s’ organizati­on says.

In its annual “Kill Report,” seen by The Associated Press, the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s said the reporters lost their lives in targeted killings, car bomb attacks and crossfire incidents around the world.

More than 250 journalist­s were in prison in 2017.

The number of deaths as of Saturday was the lowest in a decade, down from 93 in 2016.

The largest number were killed in Mexico, but many also died in conflict zones in Afghanista­n, Iraq and Syria.

The IFJ suspected but could not officially confirm that at least one other journalist was killed Thursday in an attack by an Islamic State suicide bomber on a Shiite cultural center in Kabul, in which at least 41 people died.

IFJ President Philippe Leruth said that while the drop in deaths “represents a downward trend, the levels of violence in journalism remain unacceptab­ly high.”

Eight women journalist­s were killed, two in European democracie­s— Wall in Denmark, who died on the submarine of an inventor she was writing about, and Maltese investigat­ive journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia who was blown up by a bomb placed in her car.

Beyond the deaths, the IFJ warned that “unpreceden­ted numbers of journalist­s were jailed, forced to flee, that self-censorship was widespread and that impunity for the killings, harassment, attacks and threats against independen­t journalism was running at epidemic levels.”

Turkey, where official pressure on the media has been ramped up since a failed coup attempt in July 2016, is becoming notorious for putting reporters behind bars. Some 160 journalist­s are jailed in Turkey—twothirds of the global total—the report said.

The organizati­on also expressed concern about India, the world’s largest democracy, where it said that attacks on journalist­s are being motivated by violent populism.

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