Press
Freedom rankings, Reporters Without Borders, 2017
|
Press freedom has never
been as threatened as it is now, in the "new post-truth era of fake
news" after the election of US President Donald Trump, Reporters Without
Borders warned Wednesday.
AFP
report continues:
Its
annual World Press Freedom Index warned of the "highly toxic"
media-bashing of Trump's election campaign and Britain's Brexit referendum.
The
situation is at "a tipping point," it said bluntly.
Media
freedom is being undermined by the rise in surveillance and of authoritarian
strongmen across the globe, the watchdog said.
The
US and Britain both slipped two places in the index to 43rd and 40th, according
to the Paris-based monitoring group, known by its French initials RSF.
"Nothing
seems to be checking" the erosion of liberty of the press in leading
democracies, it said.
"Media
freedom has never been so threatened."
Liberty
of the press is in peril or in a "very serious situation" in 72
countries including Russia, India and China, it found.
"Attacks
on the media have become commonplace and strongmen are on the rise. We have
reached the age of post-truth, propaganda, and suppression of freedoms --
especially in democracies," the report said.
"Donald
Trump's rise to power... and the Brexit campaign were marked by high-profile
media-bashing, a highly toxic anti-media discourse that drove the world into a
new era of post-truth, disinformation and fake news," it added.
Poland
and Hungary came in for withering criticism in the report.
The
nationalist government in Warsaw was accused of "turning public radio and
TV stations into propaganda tools" and of trying to throttle independent
newspapers.
- Turkish jails -
"Media
freedom has retreated wherever the authoritarian strongman model has
triumphed," it warned.
Turkey
"swung over into the authoritarian regime camp" after the failed coup
against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in July, it said, adding bitterly that
it "now distinguishes itself as the world's biggest prison for media
professionals."
Seven
places ahead of Turkey, "Vladimir Putin's Russia remains firmly entrenched
in the bottom fifth of the index," in 148th place, it added.
"The
rate at which democracies are approaching the tipping point is alarming for all
those who understand that, if media freedom is not secure, then none of the
other freedoms can be guaranteed," RSF Secretary-general Christophe
Deloire said.
"Where
will this downward spiral take us?" he asked.
The
RSF index found that in the past year nearly two thirds of the countries had
registered a deterioration in their situation, while the number of countries
where the media freedom situation was "good" or "fairly
good" fell by more than two percent.
- North Korea 'least
free' -
Norway
came out top of the index with the world's freest media.
It
took over from neighbouring Finland which had held the title for six years.
At
the other end of the scale, North Korea took bottom place from another
repressive closed state, Eritrea, which has propped up the table for a decade.
North
Korea continues to keep "its population in ignorance and terror," RSF
said.
"Even
listening to a foreign radio broadcast can lead to a spell in a concentration
camp."
China,
war-torn Syria -- the deadliest country for journalists -- and Turkmenistan
complete the bottom five.
Italy
showed the biggest improvement, rising 25 places to 52nd place thanks to the
acquittal of journalists tried in the Vatileaks II case, which exposed scandal
at the top of the Catholic Church.
Nicaragua
registered the biggest fall of 17 places with the controversial re-election of
President Daniel Ortega "marked by many cases of censorship, intimidation,
harassment and arbitrary arrest," the RSF said.
Tanzania also saw a sharp decline. President John Magufuli "keeps tightening his grip on the media," RSF said.
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