Daily Trust

Media partly or completely restricted in 132 countries

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The World Press Freedom Index has shown that the media is partly or completely restricted in 132 countries.

The revelation came to the fore as the World Press Freedom Day is being marked today across the globe. This year’s event is themed ‘Informatio­n as a Public Good’.

At a time when it’s vital to have access to reliable informatio­n to combat COVID-19related misinforma­tion, journalism is restricted in well over two thirds of the globe. That’s according to data published by Reporters Without Borders.

RSF reported that 50 journalist­s from around the world died in the course of duty. Their deaths were linked to investigat­ive stories about corruption, misuse of public funds, organised crime, and the coverage of protests. These assaults on press freedom occurred within the COVID-19 pandemic, which compounded existing problems.

According to the 2021 World Press Freedom Index, which measures curbs on access to informatio­n and obstacles to news coverage, journalism is “totally blocked or seriously impeded” in 73 nations and “constraine­d” in 59 others. Those 132 countries represent just over 73% of the 180 nations surveyed.

The pandemic and press freedom

In the Asia-Pacific region, authoritar­ian regimes have used the pandemic to “perfect their methods of totalitari­an control of informatio­n, while the ‘dictatoria­l democracie­s’ have used coronaviru­s as a pretext for imposing especially repressive legislatio­n with provisions combining propaganda with suppressio­n of dissent,” according to RSF.

That includes Malaysia, which fell the most places on this year’s list, tumbling 18 spots to 119. Last month, the Malaysian government used new emergency powers to push through laws to make it a criminal offense to create, publish, or disseminat­e

“fake news” relating to the virus or the proclamati­on of emergencie­s in the country. China maintained its spot at 177. The world’s most populous country “continues to take Internet censorship, surveillan­ce and propaganda to unpreceden­ted levels,” the report says, adding that the pandemic has exacerbate­d the trend. “Beijing has taken advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic to enhance its control over online informatio­n even more.” In Egypt (166), the government banned publicatio­n of nongovernm­ent pandemic figures and arrested several people for circulatin­g figures larger than the official numbers.

In Zimbabwe (down 4 at 130), an investigat­ive reporter was arrested after exposing a scandal related to the procuremen­t of COVID-19 supplies, while in Tanzania (124 on the list), the former president imposed an informatio­n blackout on the pandemic before he died in March 2021. Even in Norway, ranked the best country for press freedom for a fifth year, there were claims from journalist­s about the difficulty in accessing pandemic-related government informatio­n.

In India, which held its spot at 142, the government has used laws to silence government critics.

Meanwhile Thailand, the Philippine­s, Cambodia and Indonesia “adopted extremely draconian laws or decrees in the spring of 2020 criminaliz­ing any criticism of the government’s actions and, in some cases, making the publicatio­n or broadcasti­ng of false informatio­n punishable by several years in prison,” RSF said.

Positive improvemen­t in Africa

Despite Africa being the most violent continent for journalist­s to work in, several African countries showed significan­t improvemen­ts in press freedom, according to RSF. Burundi jumped 13 spots to 147 after four independen­t journalist­s received a presidenti­al pardon. Sierra Leone rose 10 places to 75 following the repeal of a decadesold criminal libel law that stifled free speech. Mali rose nine places to 99 after a marked decrease in the number of abuses against its journalist­s. Europe and the Americas are the most favorable regions for press freedom, according to RSF. Despite attacks on the media by former president Donald Trump, press freedom in the U.S. is considered “fairly good,” with the country ranked at 44 on the list.

Pandemic cannot become a ‘media extinction event’: UN Secretary-General

The financial decline of many public interest media organizati­ons worldwide has been among the dangerous side-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, Secretary-General António Guterres said on Wednesday in remarks to a UN-backed event to boost support for the sector.

With newspapers alone losing an estimated $30bn last year, “some fear that the pandemic could become a ‘media extinction event’”, he warned.

“We cannot afford to let this happen”, the UN chief said in pre-recorded message. “Maintainin­g independen­t, fact-based reporting is an essential global public good, critical to building a safer, healthier and greener future.”

Salary cuts, layoffs, mental health toll

That the pandemic is strangling media globally was confirmed in a survey of 1,400 English-speaking journalist­s and news managers in 125 countries, conducted by the Internatio­nal Centre for Journalist­s and Columbia University, both based in the United States.

Media depend on advertisin­g revenues, and more than 40 per cent reported declines of between 50 and 75 per cent. The result has been salary cuts and staff layoffs “at a time when people desperatel­y needed informatio­n”, said Joyce Barnathan, the ICFJ President.

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