A free and fair press has always been a target for tyrants and
criminals. As a result, reporters, photographers, and bloggers can find
themselves in harm’s way while informing us of world and local events.
Sadly, this situation has not improved much with time: as of this
writing, 960 journalists have been murdered in the last 10 years.
The following are the “10 Deadliest Countries for Journalists”, as
ranked by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). To humanize the
grim statistics, each entry includes a passage describing a late
journalist, randomly selected from victim rolls that are entirely too
long.
NOTE: CPJ confirms a case only if it’s reasonably sure a journalist was
murdered “in direct reprisal for his or her work, killed in
combat/crossfire, or killed while carrying out a dangerous assignment.”
Should you wish to contribute to its efforts, you may donate to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
10. Mexico
Total Murders since 1992: 28
Since 1992, 89% of Mexico’s killed journalists were murdered, mostly by drug cartels and criminal gangs operating with near-total impunity. As could be expected from the failing drug war in Mexico, the victims’ beats typically focused on crime, with some overlap for covering government corruption.
One such victim was Luis Emanuel Ruiz Carrillo, a 21 year old
photographer working for La Prensa. He was kidnapped along with his
cousin (Juan Gomez Melendez) and a popular TV show host (Jose Luis Cerds
Melendez). All three were later found dead with gunshot wounds to the
head, next to fresh graffiti warning “Stop cooperating with the Zetas”.
The Zetas are a major drug cartel, and operate with such freedom in
Mexico that an armed Zeta walked into the police’s active crime scene
and moved the bodies to a different location.
Ruiz was still in college, and winner of a journalism award the previous year. He had been on the job eight months. 09 more countries after the break...
09. India
Total Murders since 1992: 28
Age-old ethnic tensions and a war over Kashmir mean India can boil over
at any time. Political groups are thought to be responsible for nearly
half of all journalist murders since 1992, yet they commit these
killings with a 94% complete impunity rating. Victims cover a wide range
of beats, working primarily in print, some television, and very little
radio.
M. L. Manchanda was one such victim in radio. According to the Freedom
Forum Journalists Memorial, Manchanda was beheaded by Punjabi militant
group Babbar Khalsa. He was kidnapped because he was the director of a
radio station in Patiala, and the radicals demanded that all reports
should be broadcast in Punjabi instead of Hindi. Manchanda was beheaded
when the government refused to comply with the demand— soon thereafter,
his torso was found in Patial and his head in Ambala. Gurdial Singh
Babbar (one of the perpetrators) was pursued and killed in an encounter
the very same day as the discovery of Manchanda’s body, and kidnapping
mastermind Amrki Singh Kauli Babbar was found and killed soon
thereafter. That’s the happiest ending we get on this list.
08. Syria
Total Murders since 1992: 29
International attention to the uprising against the Assad regime has
catapulted Syria into the top ten. The majority of killed journalists
were Syrian citizens working in television and Internet media, although
15% were foreign correspondents. Most died in combat crossfire while
covering human rights, war, and politics. Half of all suspected
perpetrators were government and military officials, with political
groups making up the other half. So far, all have committed their
killings with total impunity.
Anas al-Tarsha, aka ‘Anas al-Homsi’ is one of these victims. He was
killed in Homs, Syria while filming the shelling of the city’s Qarabees
district. For three weeks, the city had been under daily attack as the
Syrian government escalated its assaults on the opposition. Al-Tarsha
uploaded his footage to YouTube, and news organizations depended on his
posts because they were denied entry into Syria (part of the
government’s blackout of independent reporting).
Anas was the fourth journalist killed that week. He was 17 years old.
07. Colombia
Total Murders since 1992: 44
Murdered journalists in Colombia since 1992 have primarily been
broadcast reporters working in radio, television, or commentators
working in print. Corruption accounts for over half of the beats covered
by victims, easily ahead of politics, crime, and human rights.
Paramilitary and government officials make up half of the suspected
perpetrators, 98% of which operate with either total impunity or
partially applied criminal justice.
Political satirist Jaime Garzón hosted a morning radio show on Bogota’s
Radionet and frequently contributed to TV news programs. He often used
his celebrity to lobby for the release of hostages taken in guerrilla
kidnappings.
Garzon was gunned down driving to work by two men on a motorcycle, who
shot him repeatedly in the head and chest. Garzón had been the target of
threats by Carlos Castaño, leader of the United Self Defense Forces of
Colombia (AUC), a right-wing paramilitary group. The AUC has denied any
knowledge of or responsibility for Garzón’s death, even though Garzon’s
coworkers said he had scheduled a meeting with Castaño for August 14,
1999 (the day after he was killed). Moreover, the gunmen who shot Garzón
were from ‘La Terraza’, a fierce criminal group Castaño had hired in
the past for kidnappings. In mid-2000, the Columbian government charged
Castaño with Garzón’s murder.
06. Pakistan
Total Murders since 1992: 48
The War on Terror has been especially perilous for reporters covering
the often lawless tribal areas of Pakistan. All victims since 1992 have
been males working mostly for print and television, covering war, crime,
politics, and corruption.
One victim was Hayatullah Khan, a freelance reporter in Miran Shah. He
was kidnapped by five gunmen in December 2005, and his body was found
handcuffed and shot several times six months later. The day before his
abduction, Khan photographed the remains of a missile which struck a
Miran Shah home, killing Hamza Rabia, a senior member of al-Qaeda.
Khan’s photos were picked up by the European media, which quickly
identified the fragments as parts of a Hellfire missile, contradicting
the government’s cover story that Rabia died in a blast produced by
explosives stored inside the house.
It was soon obvious that Rabia was killed by a U.S. drone, and Khan had
broken the story. Immediately afterward (and all through his
disappearance), government officials gave Khan’s family different
accounts of his whereabouts. After the body was finally discovered,
hospital workers said Khan had been detained in handcuffs typically used
by Pakistan’s shady Inter-Services Intelligence agency. Pakistan’s
ambassador to the US dismissed these findings as circumstantial evidence
planted to incriminate the government. No autopsy was performed, and
the High Court never released the results of its investigation.
05. Somalia
Total Murders since 1992: 48
Foreign Policy magazine continually grades Somalia as a failed state,
with no functioning government or civil infrastructure. So it should
come as no surprise that civil and legal protections are non-existent
for any journalist, be it a local reporter or foreign correspondent.
Broadcast reporters and editors make up 69% of journalists murdered
since 1992, but virtually anyone involved in making the news is at risk.
Over half of all murders are suspected to be committed by political
groups, and the next largest group is ‘unknown’. Murdering journalists
with impunity in Somalia is a given.
Liban Ali Nur was one of those givens. He was killed along with three
other journalists in suicide bombing of a Mogadishu café. Two
unidentified men entered The Village café around 5PM and detonated bombs
that killed 14 people and injured 20 more. A spokesman for Al Shabaab
said their supporters— not Al Shabaab directly –were responsible for the
killing.
The Village café was known to be a frequent haunt of the Mogadishu
press, leading many to speculate that the media were directly targeted.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, one journalist said “If anyone
wanted to kill journalists en masse, that was the place and the time.”
04. Russia
Total Murders since 1992: 54
Print journalists make up 70% of all murdered journalists in Russia
since 1992, and their beats cover a lot of ground, ranging from
corruption and politics (same thing) to war, crime, and business (again,
same thing?). Frighteningly, ‘unknown’ is tied with ‘criminal groups’
to lead the suspected perpetrator list, followed closely by government
officials. Murderers of journalists in Russia enjoy a 91% complete
impunity rating.
Anastasiya Baburova was a freelance reporter contributing to the Novaya
Gazeta, a Moscow newspaper. She was shot at 3pm on a street within
walking distance of the Kremlin on January 19, 2009. She had just
covered a press conference by noted human rights lawyer Stanislav
Markelov, who denounced the early release of a Russian Army officer
convicted for abducting and killing a Chechen girl in 2000.
Markelov and Baburova were walking away from the conference when radical
nationalists Nikita Tikhonov and Yevgeniya Khasis approached from
behind and shot Markelov in the back of the head. Baburov tried to stop
the attack but was shot and killed as well. The nationalists were later
arrested in November 2009 and convicted soon thereafter. The Novaya
Gazeta appreciates the court’s verdict, but calls for Russian law
enforcement to pursue all accomplices as well.
03. Algeria
Total Murders since 1992: 60
60 correspondents have been killed in Algeria since 1992, three quarters
of whom were killed by ‘unknown’ attackers. The journalists’ beats
covered a variety of issues, but unlike other entries on this list,
reprisals for ‘culture’ pieces account for 17% of killings. Victims’
jobs run the gamut from camera operator to publisher/owner, and 98% of
suspected perpetrators operate with complete impunity.
Reporters Allaoua M’barak, Mohamed Dorbane, and Djamel Derraz all worked
for the daily newspaper Le Soir d’Algérie. They were killed in Algiers
when a car bomb exploded outside a presses building. Three other daily
newspapers had offices in the same building, and at least 15 other
people died. In a rare moment of transparency, local authorities went on
record and stated that Islamic militants were thought to be
responsible.
02. Philippines
Total Murders since 1992: 73
Shockingly (to this sheltered westerner, anyway), 73 journalists have
been killed covering the Filipino corruption, crime, and politics beats
since 1992. Almost half of all victims are taken captive and tortured.
69% of perpetrators are suspected to be government officials, and 90% of
them operate with complete impunity (only 1% of cases ever receive full
judicial due process).
Broadcaster Romeo Olea was murdered in Iriga City, Philippines on June
13, 2011, apparently in retaliation for harsh commentaries of a
political clan during the May 2010 elections. Following death threats at
his home, Olea’s wife Raquel begged him to soften his reports, but he
told her ‘if he stopped doing exposes, nobody else will do the job.”
Iriga City Mayor (and target of many Olea exposes) Madelaine Alfelor
Gazmen condemned the killing, but also warned local media against any
rush to judgment.
Olea left behind a wife and two children. The case is still unsolved,
and a 500,000 pesos reward is being offered for any information leading
to the arrest and conviction of Olea’s killers.
01. Iraq
Total Murders since 1992: 151
It’s not even close. With an ongoing war, open terrorism, and rampant
corruption, Iraq leads the world as the deadliest beat for journalists
since 1992.
As of this writing (surely out of date as you read this), 151
journalists have died covering Iraq. Leading causes of death are murder
and combat crossfire. Television workers take the lion’s share of
deaths, with 83% of all media deaths tied to political groups operating
with total impunity.
In 2007, a rooftop sniper killed Adnan al-Safi, a correspondent for
Kuwait-based Al Anwar, a moderate Shiite satellite TV channel covering
Islamic issues and popular culture. Al-Safi had finished work for the
day and was waiting at a Baghdad bus stop so he could return home.
Fellow journalists think al-Safi was directly targeted, since no
bystanders were injured in the attack. Al-Safi leaves behind a wife and
three children.
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