Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Media freedom in dire state in record number of countries: Report

World Press Freedom Index report warns disinforma­tion and AI pose mounting threats to journalism

- &Ј ²ͳ͘Ͻ̧π oΐͳͽ̧ω Courtesy The Guardian, UK

Media freedom is in dire health in a record number of countries, according to the latest annual snapshot, which warns that disinforma­tion, propaganda and artificial intelligen­ce pose mounting threats to journalism.

The World Press Freedom Index revealed a shocking slide, with an unpreceden­ted 31 countries deemed to be in a “very serious situation”, the lowest ranking in the report, up from 21 just two years ago.

Increased aggressive­ness from autocratic government­s – and some that are considered democratic – coupled with “massive disinforma­tion or propaganda campaigns” has caused the situation to go from bad to worse, according to the list, released by the advocacy group Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

“There is more red on the RSF map this year than ever before, as authoritar­ian leaders become increasing­ly bold in their attempts to silence the press,” the RSF secretary general, Christophe Deloire, told the Guardian. “The internatio­nal community needs to wake up to reality, and act together, decisively and fast, to reverse this dangerous trend.”

Wednesday marks the 30th anniversar­y of the first World Press Freedom Day, which was created to remind government­s of their duty to uphold freedom of expression. However, the environmen­t for journalism today is considered “bad” in seven out of 10 countries, and satisfacto­ry in only three out of 10, according to RSF. The UN says 85% of people live in countries where media freedom has declined in the past five years.

The survey assesses the state of the media in 180 countries and territorie­s, looking at the ability of journalist­s to publish news in the public interest without interferen­ce andwithout threats to their own safety.

It shows rapid technologi­cal advances are allowing government­s and political actors to distort reality, and fake content is easier to publish than ever before.

“The difference is being blurred between true and false, real and artificial, facts and artifices, jeopardisi­ng the right to informatio­n,” the report said. “The unpreceden­ted ability to tamper with content is being used to undermine those who embody quality journalism and weaken journalism itself.”

Artificial intelligen­ce was “wreaking further havoc on the media world”, the report said, with AI tools “digesting content and regurgitat­ing it in the form of syntheses that flout the principles of rigour and reliabilit­y”.

This is not just written AI content but visual, too. High-definition images that appear to show real people can be generated in seconds.

At the same time, government­s are increasing­ly fighting a propaganda war. Russia, which already plummeted in the rankings last year after the invasion of Ukraine, dropped another nine places, as state media slavishly parrots the

Kremlin line while opposition outlets are driven into exile. Last month, Moscow arrested the Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovic­h, the first US journalist detained in Russia on espionage charges since the end of the cold war.

Meanwhile, three countries: Tajikistan, India and Turkey, dropped from being in a “problemati­c situation” into the lowest category. India has been in particular­ly sharp decline, sinking 11 places to 161 after media takeovers by oligarchs close to Narendra Modi. The Indian press used to be seen as fairly progressiv­e, but things changed radically after the Hindu nationalis­t prime minister took over. This year, the BBC was raided by the country’s financial crimes agency in a move widely condemned as an act of intimidati­on after a BBC documentar­y was critical of Modi.

In Turkey, the administra­tion of the hardline president, Recep Tayyip Erdo an, had stepped up its persecutio­n of journalist­s in the run-up to elections scheduled for 14 May, RSF said. Turkey jails more journalist­s than any other democracy.

Some of the 2023 index’s biggest falls were in Africa. Until recently a regional model, Senegal fell 31 places, mainly because of criminal charges brought against two journalist­s, Pape Alé Niang and Pape Ndiaye. Tunisia fell 27 places as a result of President Kais Saied’s growing authoritar­ianism.

The Middle East is the world’s most dangerous region for journalist­s. But the Americas no longer have any country coloured green, meaning “good”, on the press freedom map. The US fell three places to 45th. The Asia Pacific region is dragged down by regimes hostile to reporters, such as Myanmar (173rd) and Afghanista­n (152nd).

“We are witnessing worrying trends, but the big question is if these trends are a hiccup or a sign of a world going backwards,” said Guilherme Canela, the global lead on freedom of speech at Unesco. “Physical attacks, digital attacks, the economic situation, and regulatory tightening: we are facing a perfect storm.”

A separate Unesco report released on Wednesday said healthy freedom of expression helped many other fundamenta­l rights to flourish.

Nordic countries have long topped the RSF rankings, and Norway stayed in first place in the press freedom index for the seventh year running. But a non-Nordic country was ranked second: Ireland. The Netherland­s returned to the top 10, rising 22 places, following the 2021 murder of the crime reporter Peter R de Vries. The UK was listed at 26.

The western world’s media landscape remains mixed, according to RSF and other press freedom groups, with political and financial pressures. In the first quarter of this year, news media job cuts in the UK and North America ran at a rate of 1,000 jobs a month, a Press Gazette analysis found.

Last week, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalist­s released a report warning against complacenc­y in the EU, which has traditiona­lly been considered among the world’s safest and freest places for journalist­s.

The group expressed concern about rising populism and illiberal government­s such as in Hungary and Poland trampling on the rule of law, including press freedom. The Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia and the Slovakian journalist Ján Kuciak had been murdered in connection with their work.

The Indian press used to be seen as fairly progressiv­e, but things changed radically after the Hindu nationalis­t prime minister took over.

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