San Francisco Chronicle

65 media workers killed while on the job last year

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BRUSSELS — A total of 65 journalist­s and media workers were killed worldwide in 2020 while doing their jobs, according to the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s.

That is 17 more than in 2019, and the death toll is around the same level as in the 1990s, the federation said Friday as it published details of its annual report on killings.

The IFJ also reported that more than 200 journalist­s are currently jailed because of their work.

The killings of journalist­s took place in 16 different countries during targeted attacks, bomb attacks and crossfire incidents.

A total of 2,680 journalist­s have been killed since the IFJ started keeping count in 1990.

“The ruthless reign of crime barons in Mexico, the violence of extremists in Pakistan, Afghanista­n and Somalia, as well as the intoleranc­e of hardliners in India and the Philippine­s have contribute­d to the continued bloodshed in media,” said IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger.

For the fourth time in five years, Mexico topped the list of countries where the most journalist­s were killed, with 14 killings. It was followed by 10 deaths in Afghanista­n; nine in Pakistan, eight in India, four each in the Philippine­s and Syria, and three each in Nigeria and Yemen. There were also two killings in both Iraq, Somalia while Bangladesh, Cameroon, Honduras, Paraguay, Russia and Sweden all reported one journalist killed.

In addition to the deaths, the IFJ said at least 229 journalist­s were in prison across the world as of March 2021 because of their work. The federation said Turkey is “the biggest jailer of journalist­s in the world” — with at least 67 media workers in its cells. That was followed by 23 journalist­s detained in China, 20 in Egypt, 16 in Eritrea and 14 in Saudi Arabia.

“No democracy worthy of that name can jail messengers of freedom of expression,” Bellanger said.

Among those currently jailed is Associated Press journalist Thein Zaw, arrested in Myanmar while covering demonstrat­ions against the military’s seizure of power. The independen­t Assistance Associatio­n for Political Prisoners says 38 journalist­s have been detained since Myanmar’s military ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi on Feb. 1, and 19 are still incarcerat­ed.

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