02/01/07


Report says 81 journalists killed in 2006; deadliest year in a decade


By HOPE YEN
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The number of journalists killed or jailed worldwide has reached its highest level in a decade, with arrests rising as governments seek to control the Internet, an advocacy group said Thursday.

The survey by Reporters Without Borders, a media-advocacy group, found that 81 journalists were killed last year and more than 140 are behind bars. It was the worst year for deaths since 1994, which was marked by the Rwandan genocide, civil war in Algeria and conflict in the former Yugoslavia.

In the United States, blogger Josh Wolf was jailed last August after defying a federal judge's order to hand over his video of a protest at an economic summit of the world's industrial powers. Sudanese Al-Jazeera cameraman Sami al-Haj was imprisoned at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, without charges on suspected al-Qaida links.

"There has never been a more dangerous time to be a journalist," said Lucie Morillon, Washington director of Reporters Without Borders. "But even more deplorable was the lack of interest, and sometimes even the failure, by democratic countries in defending everywhere the values they are supposed to incarnate."

The report said many governments were seeking to gain more control over the Internet, a popular medium for dissent in less democratic countries and a growing source of news in the U.S.

At least 60 people are in prison worldwide for posting criticism of their governments online, from 50 in China to four in Vietnam, three in Syria and one each in Tunisia, Libya and Iran.

China has been a leader among those countries in installing spyware and demanding that U.S. companies Yahoo Inc., Google Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. alter their search-engines to filter out Web sites critical of the government, the report said.

In the U.S., the report said journalists and bloggers' "freedom of expression" is at risk. It called for laws requiring that telecommunications companies treat Internet broadband content alike and move the information at the same network speed -- whether the content is on a small, independent blog, or Web log, or well-heeled Web site.

Legislation to do that was rejected by the Senate last June, but backers are hopeful that the new Democratic-controlled Congress will change course.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, meanwhile, has said that Congress should require Internet providers to preserve customer records as a way to assist prosecutors' investigations into child pornography and possibly terrorism.

"It has become vital to examine new technology from a moral standpoint and understand the secondary effects of it," the report said. "If firms and democratic countries continue to duck the issue ... we shall soon be in a world where all our communications are spied on."

Iraq was the most deadly country for journalists last year, with 39 reporters and 26 other media workers killed. Among them were two Americans -- Paul Douglas of CBS and his soundman James Brolan, while the rest were Iraqis.

At least 30 journalists were arrested by Iraqi security forces during 2006. The U.S. Army arrested eight media workers, including AP photographer Bilal Hussein, who was taken into custody last April and has yet to be charged.

During the international uproar over cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, countries did little to help journalists who were threatened or arrested, the report said.

"It was as if, fearing a fight with Arab and Muslim regimes, Europe, for one, renounced all desire to make itself heard," the report said.

The Muhammad drawings were first published in September 2005 in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten and were reprinted four months later by a range of Western publications, triggering massive protests from Morocco to Indonesia and some attacks on Danish embassies.

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On the Net:
The full report can be found at: http://www.rsf.org/IMG/pdf/rapport_en_md-2.pdf

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