Mindanao Times

10 countries cited for extreme media censorship

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ERITREA is the world’s worst country for press censorship, a media watchdog said Tuesday in a report which also cites extreme measures in nine other countries including

North Korea, China and Saudi Arabia.

Under the three worst regimes -- Eritrea, North Korea, and Turkmenist­an -- the media “serves as a mouthpiece of the state, and any independen­t journalism is conducted from exile,” said a report by the USbased Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

Other countries on the list of the 10 worst regimes for media “use a combinatio­n of blunt tactics like harassment and arbitrary detention as well as sophistica­ted surveillan­ce and targeted hacking to silence the independen­t press,” the report said.

Saudi Arabia, China, Vietnam, and Iran were cited for “jailing and harassing journalist­s and their families, while also engaging in digital monitoring and censorship of the internet and social media,” the group said.

The rankings were based on factors including restrictio­ns on privately owned or independen­t media; criminal defamation laws; restrictio­ns on the disseminat­ion of false news; blocking of websites; surveillan­ce of journalist­s by authoritie­s; license requiremen­ts for media; and targeted hacking or trolling.

“The internet was supposed to make censorship obsolete, but that hasn’t happened,” said CPJ executive director Joel Simon.

“Many of the world’s most censored countries are highly wired, with active online communitie­s. These government­s combine old-style brutality with new technology, often purchased from Western companies, to stifle dissent and control the media.”

The report covers 10 countries where the government tightly controls the media, including Equatorial Guinea, Belarus, and Cuba.

It noted that in other countries including warravaged nations such as Syria, Yemen, and Somalia, conditions for the media are “extremely difficult, but not necessaril­y attributab­le solely to government censorship.”

In Eritrea, the report noted, the state retains a legal monopoly of broadcast media and journalist­s’ alternativ­e sources of informatio­n, such as the internet or satellite broadcasts of radio stations in exile, are restricted via government­controlled internet services.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has stepped up the use of radio signal blockers and advanced radio detection equipment to prevent people from sharing informatio­n, CPJ said.

The group said Saudi Arabia’s already-repressive environmen­t for the press has “suffered sharp deteriorat­ion” under de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, according to the report.

China has the most sophistica­ted censorship apparatus, according to CPJ, which noted that Chinese internet users are blocked by the “Great Firewall” and that authoritie­s monitor domestic social media networks and conduct surveillan­ce of internatio­nal journalist­s.Agence FrancePres­se

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