Begin quote from: http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2012/05/03/journalists_being_killed_at_astonishing_pace/
Journalists being killed at `astonishing pace'
By
Edith M. Lederer
Associated Press
/
May 3, 2012
UNITED NATIONS—On
World Press Freedom Day, Reporters Without Borders condemned the
"astonishing pace" at which journalists are being attacked and murdered
-- 67 killed in 2011 and 22 more deaths since the beginning of the year.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the attacks "outrageous" and urged
all countries to prevent and prosecute violence against the media and
take action to ensure the safety of journalists and freedom of the
press.
At Thursday's U.N.
commemoration of Press Freedom Day, Ban asked the assembled diplomats,
members of the media and civil society representatives to observe a
minute of silence "in honor of the journalists who were killed in the
line of duty last year."
According
to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, 179 journalists
were detained in 2011, a 20 percent increase over 2010 and the highest
level since 1990, Ban said.
"Countless
others face intimidation, harassment and censorship at the hands of
governments, corporations and powerful individuals seeking to preserve
their power or hide wrongdoings and misdeeds," the secretary-general
said.
Ireland's President
Michael Higgins, a former broadcaster, told the commemoration the deaths
demonstrate the risks that journalists and media workers face and
"their vulnerability to intimidation, violence and persecution."
"Many were victims of targeted killings, while the circumstances of other killings may never be fully explained," he said.
Reporters
Without Borders updated its list of "predators of the freedom to
inform" to 41 individuals and group. It said the first quarter of 2012
clearly showed that the world's predators led by Syria's President
Bashar Assad and Somalia's Islamist militias "are capable of behaving
like outrageous butchers."
The
media advocacy organization, based in France, decried the increase in
attacks and killings of news providers -- up from 57 murders in 2010 to
67 in 2011, and 22 so far this year including five journalists killings
in Somalia, four in Syria, and two each in Bangladesh, Brazil and India.
In
Somalia's capital Mogadishu, dozens of Somali journalists met Thursday
in somber silence to celebrate World Press Freedom Day, a meeting that
took place only hours after the killing of the fifth Somali journalist
this year. Two armed men shadowed Somali radio journalist Farhan Abdulle
after he left his station late Wednesday, then shot him dead.
The
killings also continued in Mexico, which has become one of the world's
most dangerous places for journalists amid a raging drug war. The bodies
of two news photographers were found dismembered in the eastern Mexican
state of Veracruz on Thursday, less than a week after the killing in
the state of a reporter for an investigative newsmagazine.
The
Reporters Without Borders predators list was updated this week to
include Vasif Talibov, leader of the Nakhchivan region in Azerbaijan, in
addition to the country's president, Ilham Aliev.
Azerbaijan's
U.N. Ambassador Agshin Mehdiyev, the current Security Council
president, denied any repression of the media, telling a news conference
Thursday that "we have a free press. ... We don't have any people
imprisoned because of their professional activities or political views."
In
Tunisia's capital, hundreds of journalists from around the world
gathered for special World Press Freedom Day events held in a country
where reporters long faced repression before protesters brought down the
country's dictator last year and sparked uprisings across the Arab
world.
UNESCO's
director-general, Irina Bokova, and Tunisia's President Moncef Marzouki,
a former human rights activist, were among those taking part in events
that included a conference on improving security for journalists and
improving access to information.
"The days of control of the media are over," said Tunisian Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali.
On
Thursday, a Tunisian court convicted the head of a private TV station
for disrupting public order and violating moral values by airing an
animated film that some religious leaders say insults Islam.
The
court in Tunis ordered Nabil Karoui to pay a 2,400-dinar ((EURO)1,200,
$1,575) fine because his station, Nessma TV, aired the animated film
"Persepolis" in October.
Secretary-General
Ban told the U.N. commemoration that the world has seen over the past
year and a half across the Middle East and North Africa "the central
role played by social media, mobile telephones and satellite television
in generating an extraordinary ripple effect: from a vegetable seller's
simple cry for human dignity, to the fall of autocratic regimes."
"As
the use of those tools expands, the world is likely to see more
historic changes -- and other applications that can advance human
well-being," he said.
Ireland's
Higgins stressed that billions of people are still unable to access the
Internet and while the "digital divide" has shrunk somewhat due to the
proliferation of mobile phones, greater efforts are required to ensure
that the poor, elderly, disabled and those living in rural areas become
connected and don't become victims of greater inequality. end quote.
This article is very very bad news for human rights worldwide. Because what it means in real terms is that governments and individuals are finding it easier to kill journalists rather than to champion human rights. So, in one sense much more is trying to be hidden than before. Another factor is that each journalist is worth his or her weight in gold in regard to social media pressure on nations and individuals and corporations. So, by all these groups setting out to kill journalists it is a way, obviously, to further hide the truth from the world. And this is bad for every one of us on earth in the end because we are looking at the potential end of all humans rights on earth during this process. So, it is important for all individuals and groups to be ever more vigilant during these dark times for human rights here on earth.
This article is very very bad news for human rights worldwide. Because what it means in real terms is that governments and individuals are finding it easier to kill journalists rather than to champion human rights. So, in one sense much more is trying to be hidden than before. Another factor is that each journalist is worth his or her weight in gold in regard to social media pressure on nations and individuals and corporations. So, by all these groups setting out to kill journalists it is a way, obviously, to further hide the truth from the world. And this is bad for every one of us on earth in the end because we are looking at the potential end of all humans rights on earth during this process. So, it is important for all individuals and groups to be ever more vigilant during these dark times for human rights here on earth.
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