CPJ: at least 220 journalists imprisoned around the world

CPJ: at least 220 journalists imprisoned around the world

PanARMENIAN.Net - There are at least 220 journalists imprisoned around the world, with 132 of them held on anti-state charges of terrorism or subversion, says a report released Wednesday, Dec 17, by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).

According to Al Jazeera, the CPJ census on jailed journalists indicates that 2014 is the second worst year for jailed journalists since the organization started conducting its annual census in 1990. The worst year was 2012, when 232 journalists were jailed.

The report does not count journalists being held by nonstate actors, such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or IS), which the CPJ estimates is holding 20 journalists.

The number of journalists held by nonstate actors — about 80 have been taken by various groups since the Syrian conflict started in 2011 — is unprecedented, according to Robert Mahoney, deputy director at the CPJ.

“We’ve never seen so many journalists held captive — for ransom or other reasons — by nonstate actors,” he said.

Mahoney said it’s clear that the journalism landscape is shifting. “The targeting of journalists has been increasing to alarming proportions,” he said. “Journalists are now losing the protected observer status that they had, and now they’ve become the story rather than being the witness to the story to some groups.”

The world’s leading jailer of journalists is China, which is holding 44 reporters, according to the CPJ. Increasingly, the CPJ study notes, governments are enacting laws that facilitate media crackdowns based on the notion of state security, as is the case with a new law in Japan.

It’s an argument used by major jailers of journalists, such as China, Iran and Egypt, where the number of jailed reporters has double since 2013, to 12 identified cases.

Egypt has held three Al Jazeera journalists — Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed — since Dec. 29, 2013, with sentences ranging from seven to 10 years. Their appeal is scheduled to be heard on Jan. 1, 2015.

Although Turkey, deemed “the world’s worst jailer” of journalists by the CPJ in 2012 and 2013, released a number of reporters this year, a recent raid resulting in the detention of at least 23 journalists employed by news organizations linked to a cleric who is at odds with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has raised red flags.

“In the case of Turkey, definitely, it is a regressive step. That’s a disturbing trend because Turkey is an important democracy in the region," said Mahoney.

In Iran the number of detained reporters in is down to 30, from 35 in 2013, the CPJ study says. But the July arrest of Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian has led to concerns of worsening crackdowns in the country.

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