* Photo: Hacı Bişkin / Gazete Duvar
Click to read the article in Turkish
With the year 2021 drawing to a close, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has released its annual report on press freedom in the world.
The report has shown that "the number of journalists behind bars has reached a global high" this year. According to the CPJ, "the number of journalists jailed around the world set another record in 2021."
"Invoking new tech and security laws, repressive regimes from Asia to Europe to Africa cracked down harshly on the independent press.
The CPJ's 2021 prison census has found that the number of reporters jailed for their work hit a new global record of 293, up from a revised total of 280 in 2020. While at least 24 journalists were killed because of their coverage so far this year, 18 others reportedly lost their lives "in circumstances too murky to determine whether they were specific targets."
This year, China has remained "the world's worst jailer of journalists" for the third year in a row, with 50 behind bars. Myanmar has soared to the second slot after the media crackdown that followed its February 1 military coup. Egypt, Vietnam and Belarus rounded out the top five.
'Once the worst jailer of journalists...'
Commenting specifically on Turkey, the CPJ has said:
"It's true that some unexpected countries did buck the trend of putting more journalists in prison. Turkey, once the world's worst jailer of journalists, is now ranked sixth in the CPJ census after releasing 20 prisoners in the last year. Eighteen remain. Saudi Arabia's release of 10 prisoners – it's holding 14 after no new journalists were recorded on the 2021 census – means it is no longer among the five biggest offenders.
However, it would be naïve to see lower prisoner numbers as a sign of a change of heart toward the press. As CPJ has noted, Turkey's crackdown after a failed coup attempt in 2016 effectively eradicated the country's mainstream media and prompted many journalists to leave the profession. Turkey's prison count is also declining as the government allows more journalists out on parole to await trial or appeal outcomes.
Findings of note from the report
Sharing an overall commentary on the increase in the number of jailed journalists worldwide, the Committee has briefly noted:
"The reasons for the relentless climb in the numbers of detained journalists – this is the sixth consecutive year that CPJ's census has recorded at least 250 incarcerated – differ between countries.
"But all reflect a stark trend: a growing intolerance of independent reporting. Emboldened autocrats are increasingly ignoring due process and flouting international norms to keep themselves in power.
"In a world preoccupied with COVID-19 and trying to prioritize issues like climate change, repressive governments are clearly aware that public outrage at human rights abuses is blunted and democratic governments have less appetite for political or economic retaliation."
Some other findings of note are as follows:
|
CLICK - BIA Media Monitoring Reports
CLICK - bianet Media Monitoring Database
(HA/SD)