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Feb. 13
Reporters Without Borders criticises lack of public commitment
to press freedom and fears anti-media violence in coming months.
The organisation released today its annual report.
Reporters Without Borders today accused public officials around
the world of "impotence, cowardice and duplicity" in defending
freedom of expression.
"The spinelessness of some Western countries and major
international bodies is harming press freedom,"
secretary-general Robert Menard said in the organisation's
annual press freedom report, out today (13 February) and
available at
www.rsf.org. "The lack of determination by democratic
countries in defending the values they supposedly stand for is
alarming."
He charged that the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva had caved
in to pressure from countries such as Iran and Uzbekistan and
expressed concern at the softness of the European Union towards
dictators who did not flinch at the threat of European
sanctions.
The report's introduction listed problems expected in the coming
year, especially physical attacks on journalists during key
elections in Pakistan (18 February), Russia (2 March), Iran (14
March) and Zimbabwe (29 March).
The worldwide press freedom organisation voiced concern about
the safety of journalists covering fighting in Sri Lanka, the
Palestinian Territories, Somalia, Niger, Chad and especially
Iraq, where it said "journalists continue to be buried almost
every week."
It also protested against censorship of new media (mobile phones
transmitting photos and film and video-sharing and social
networking websites) and highlighted media repression in China
in the run-up to the Olympic Games there this summer.
"Nobody apart from the International Olympic Committee seems to
believe the government will make a significant human rights
concession before the Games start," it said. "Every time a
journalist or blogger is released, another goes into prison.
(...) China's dissidents will probably be having a hard time
this summer."
The report includes surveys of press freedom in every region of
the world over the past year and chapters on 98 countries,
including European Union members and the United States.
A press conference to introduce the report will be held in
Washington on 13 February in the presence of journalists from
Iraq, China, Eritrea and Pakistan. Another will be held in
Berlin with Russian and Zimbabwean journalists.
see:
http://www.rsf.org/IMG/pdf/rapport_en-2.pdf |