Number of jailed journalists sets global record
Worldwide tally reaches highest point since CPJ began
surveys in 1990. Governments use charges of terrorism, other anti-state offenses
to silence critical voices. Turkey is the world’s worst jailer. A CPJ special report
Imprisonment of journalists worldwide reached a record high in 2012, driven in part by the widespread use of charges of terrorism and other anti-state offenses against critical reporters and editors, the Committee to Protect Journalists has found. In its annual census of imprisoned journalists, CPJ identified 232 individuals behind bars on December 1, an increase of 53 over its 2011 tally.
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• Database of all
imprisoned journalists
• Video: Free the Press
• Audio: In a Cuban prison
• Blog: Turkey's path
• Blog: Rwanda's injustice
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Large-scale imprisonments in Turkey, Iran, and China helped lift the global tally to
its highest point since CPJ began conducting worldwide surveys in 1990,
surpassing the previous record of 185 in 1996. The three nations, the world’s
worst jailers of the press, each made extensive use of vague anti-state laws to
silence dissenting political views, including those expressed by ethnic
minorities. Worldwide, anti-state charges such as terrorism, treason,
and subversion were the most common allegations brought against journalists in
2012. At least 132 journalists were being held around the world on such
charges, CPJ’s census found.
Eritrea
and Syria also ranked among the
world’s worst, each jailing numerous journalists without charge or due process and
holding them in secret prisons without access to lawyers or family members.
Worldwide, 63 journalists are being held without
any publicly disclosed charge.
Vietnam,
Azerbaijan, Ethiopia, Uzbekistan, and Saudi Arabia rounded out
the 10 worst jailers. In two of those nations, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan, the authorities
used retaliatory charges such as hooliganism and drug possession to jail
critical reporters and editors. In 19 cases worldwide, governments used a
variety of charges unrelated to journalism to silence critical journalists. In
the cases included in this census, CPJ determined that the charges were fabricated.
(Read detailed
accounts of each journalist imprisoned worldwide.)In Turkey, the world’s worst jailer with 49 journalists behind bars, the authorities held dozens of Kurdish reporters and editors on terror-related charges and a number of other journalists on charges of involvement in anti-government plots. In 2012, CPJ conducted an extensive review of imprisonments in Turkey, confirming journalism-related reasons in numerous cases previously unlisted on the organization’s annual surveys and raising the country’s total significantly. CPJ found that broadly worded anti-terror and penal code statutes have allowed Turkish authorities to conflate the coverage of banned groups and the investigation of sensitive topics with outright terrorism or other anti-state activity.
These statutes “make no distinction between journalists
exercising freedom of expression and [individuals] aiding terrorism,” said
Mehmet Ali Birand, a top editor with the Istanbul-based station Kanal D.
Calling the use of anti-state laws against journalists a “national disease,”
Birand said “the government does not differentiate between these two major
things: freedom of expression and terrorism.” Among the imprisoned is Tayip
Temel, editor-in-chief of Azadiya
Welat, the nation’s sole Kurdish-language daily, who faced more than 20
years in prison on charges of being a member of a banned Kurdish organization.
As evidence, the government has cited Temel’s published work, along with his
wiretapped telephone conversations with colleagues and news sources.
Iran, the second-worst jailer with 45 behind bars, has
sustained a crackdown that began after the disputed 2009 presidential election. The
authorities have followed a pattern of freeing some detainees on six-figure
bonds even as they make new arrests. The imprisoned include Zhila
Bani-Yaghoub, an award-winning editor of the Iranian Women’s Club, a news website focusing on women’s issues.
She began serving a one-year term in September on charges of “propagating
against the regime” and “insulting the president” for articles she wrote during
the 2009 election. Her husband, journalist Bahman Ahmadi Amouee, is serving a five-year prison term on anti-state
charges.
China, the third-worst jailer, has made extensive
use of anti-state charges to jail online writers expressing dissident political
views and journalists covering ethnic minority groups. Nineteen of the 32
journalists held in China are Tibetans or Uighurs imprisoned for
documenting ethnic tensions that escalated in 2008. The detainees include Dhondup Wangchen, a documentary
filmmaker jailed after interviewing Tibetans about their lives under Chinese
rule. CPJ honored
Wangchen with one of its 2012 International Press Freedom Awards. “Journalists
who report on areas deemed ‘most sensitive’ by the state—China’s troubled
ethnic regions of Tibet and Xinjiang—are most vulnerable,” said Phelim Kine,
deputy director of the Asia division of Human Rights Watch. “Journalists living
and working in those areas are not just concerned with the red lines set by the
state for all journalists but also the shifting gray lines, where the Chinese
government’s security footing is at an ongoing, all-time high.”
The
worst abuser of due process is Eritrea, which was holding 28 journalists, the
fourth-highest total worldwide. No Eritrean detainee has ever been publicly
charged with a crime or brought before a court for trial. President
Isaias Afwerki’s government has refused
to account for the whereabouts, legal status, or health of the jailed
journalists, or even confirm reports
that as many as five have died in custody due to inhumane treatment. CPJ
continues to list the journalists said to have died as it seeks to verify those
reports. Over all, the Eritrean detainees include nine independent
journalists jailed in a large-scale 2001-2 crackdown and 19 state media
journalists who violated the government’s rigid controls. “If you write
anything contrary to what the state says, you end up in prison,” said Bealfan
Tesfay, who worked as a reporter and editor for a number of Eritrean state media
outlets before fleeing the country. “I left Eritrea one year and three months
ago. I walked for three days and three nights. If I was caught, you’d probably
never hear from me again. … No one knows anything about the whereabouts of
these imprisoned journalists. No one knows anything, whether they are dead or
alive. They’ve never been charged. Their families don’t even have any contact
with them.”
Syrian forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad
were holding at least 15 journalists, making the country the fifth-worst jailer.
None of the detainees have been charged with a crime, and the authorities have
been unwilling to account for the detainees’ whereabouts or well-being. Among
those believed to be in custody is Austin
Tice, a U.S. freelance reporter who had contributed coverage of the
country’s civil war to
The Washington Post, McClatchy, Al-Jazeera English, and several other
news outlets. “Big brother is never too far away—since the revolution it’s all
the more difficult. As the uprising became more militarized, there was a greater
risk of getting picked up,” said Rania Abouzeid, a Beirut-based correspondent for
Time magazine who has traveled to
Syria clandestinely to cover the conflict on several occasions. “The regime
will often set up sudden checkpoints, and once you’re there it’s difficult to
turn around.”
With 14
journalists behind bars, Vietnam was the sixth-worst jailer of the press. In
each of the past several years, Vietnamese authorities have ramped up
their crackdown on critical journalists, focusing heavily on those who work
online. All but one of the reporters imprisoned in 2012 published blogs or
contributed to online news publications. And all but one were held on anti-state
charges related to articles on politically sensitive topics such as the
country’s relations with China and its treatment of the Catholic community.
Worldwide, 118 journalists whose
work appeared primarily online were in jail on December 1, constituting a
little more than half of the census. The proportion is consistent with those
seen in CPJ’s previous three surveys, which had followed several years of
significant increases in the numbers of imprisoned online journalists. Print
journalists constituted the second-largest professional group, with 77 jailed
worldwide. The other detainees were from radio, television, and documentary
filmmaking.
Azerbaijan, the world’s seventh-worst jailer, viciously
cracked
down on domestic dissent as it hosted two major international events, the Eurovision
2012 song contest and the Internet Governance Forum. The authorities imprisoned
at least nine critical journalists on a variety of retaliatory charges,
including hooliganism, drug possession, and extortion. CPJ concluded that the
charges were fabricated in reprisal for the journalists’ work.
With six journalists in prison, Ethiopia was the
eighth-worst jailer in the world. The authorities broadened the scope of the
country’s anti-terror law in 2009, criminalizing the coverage of any group the government
deems to be terrorist, a list that includes opposition political parties. Among
those jailed is Eskinder
Nega, an award-winning blogger whose critical commentary on the
government’s extensive use of anti-terror laws led to his own conviction on
terrorism charges.
“Basically,
they are criminalizing journalism,” said Martin Schibbye, a Swedish
freelance journalist who was jailed
along with a colleague, Johan
Persson, for more than 14 months in Ethiopia. The two were convicted of
terrorism charges because they had traveled with a separatist group as part of
research for a story. “In our profession, you need to talk to both sides to get
the story. They have criminalized talking to one side of the conflict. Just
meeting with a member of an organization or communicating with an e-mail” is
conflated with terrorism.
Uzbekistan
and Saudi Arabia, each of which was holding four journalists, fill out the list
of the 10 worst jailers. The detainees in Uzbekistan include Muhammad
Bekjanov and Yusuf
Ruzimuradov, the two longest-imprisoned journalists on CPJ’s survey. They were
jailed in 1999 for publishing a banned newspaper. In Saudi Arabia, newspaper
columnist Hamza
Kashgari faces a potential death penalty on religious insult charges
stemming from Twitter postings that described a fanciful conversation with the
Prophet Muhammad.
CPJ confirmed the death of one imprisoned
journalist, Iranian blogger Sattar Beheshti.
Arrested in October on charges of “acting against national security,” Beheshti
was dead within days. Fellow prisoners said Beheshti, 35, was beaten
during interrogation, repeatedly threatened with death, and hung from his limbs
from the ceiling, according to news reports.
Here are other trends and details that emerged in
CPJ’s analysis:
- The 29.6 percent worldwide increase over 2011 was the largest percentage jump in a decade and the second consecutive annual increase of more than 20 percent. Imprisonments increased 23.4 percent from 2010 to 2011.
- For the first time since 1996, Burma is not among the nations jailing journalists. As part of the country’s historic transition to civilian rule, the authorities released at least 12 imprisoned journalists in a series of pardons over the past year.
- The number of journalists held on anti-state charges, 132, is the highest CPJ has recorded, although its proportion of the overall tally, about 57 percent, is consistent with surveys in recent years.
- The use of retaliatory charges was the next most common tactic among cases in which charges were publicly disclosed. Nineteen journalists faced such charges worldwide.
- Seven journalists were being held on charges of engaging in ethnic or religious “insult,” and six others were jailed on criminal defamation allegations. Violations of censorship statutes were cited in three cases, while charges of disseminating “false news” were lodged in two instances.
- As part of an extensive yearlong review of imprisonments in Turkey, CPJ conducted an August 1 survey of detainees. CPJ found 61 journalists imprisoned in direct relation to their work at the time, with 15 more being held in less clear circumstances. Since CPJ’s August survey, Turkish authorities have freed a number of journalists who had been held pending trial or verdict.
- Cuba, after a one-year absence from the census, rejoined the nations imprisoning journalists. Security agents arrested Calixto Ramón Martínez Arias, a reporter for the independent news agency Centro de Información Hablemos Press, in September on insult charges. When he was arrested, Martínez Arias was investigating reports that an international shipment of medicine and medical equipment had been damaged.
- The imprisonment in Cuba was the only case documented by CPJ in the Americas, where jailings have become increasingly rare. No cases were recorded in the region in CPJ’s 2011 census.
- The overwhelming majority of the detainees are local journalists being held by their own governments. Three foreign journalists were imprisoned worldwide, CPJ’s survey found.
- Online and print media journalists constituted the two largest professional groups on CPJ’s census. Among other media, 24 television journalists, 12 radio reporters, and one documentary filmmaker were being held.
- Eighty-five freelance journalists were in jail worldwide on December 1, constituting about 37 percent of the census. The proportion of freelance journalists, which had trended upward in recent years, dropped for the first time since 2006.
- Along with Dhondup Wangchen, being held in China, three other winners of CPJ International Press Freedom Awards were being held worldwide. They are Azimjon Askarov in Kyrgyzstan, Shi Tao in China, and Mohammad Davari in Iran.
CPJ believes
that journalists should not be imprisoned for doing their jobs. The
organization has sent letters expressing its serious concerns to each country
that has imprisoned a journalist. In the past year, CPJ advocacy led to the
early release of at least 58 imprisoned journalists worldwide.
CPJ’s list is a snapshot of those incarcerated at 12:01 a.m. on December
1, 2012.
It does not include the many journalists imprisoned and released throughout the
year; accounts of those cases can be found at www.cpj.org.
Journalists remain on CPJ’s list until the organization determines with reasonable certainty
that they have been released or have died in custody.Journalists who either disappear or are abducted by nonstate entities such as criminal gangs or militant groups are not included on the prison census. Their cases are classified as “missing” or “abducted.”
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The number of journalists imprisoned worldwide reached a record high in 2012
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