Nepal: Kathmandu, Dec 10: According to the annual report of the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), 2024 was another particularly deadly year for journalists and media professionals.
As of 10 December 2024, 104
journalists had been killed worldwide, more than half of them in Gaza,
Palestine (55). The IFJ reaffirms its determination to see an International
Convention for the Protection of Journalists adopted by the United Nations as a
matter of urgency.
To mark International Human
Rights Day on 10 December, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ)
has published the initial findings of its 2024 annual report on journalists and
media workers killed in the line of duty.
According to the latest data,
which is still incomplete, 104 media professionals have been killed since 1
January, including 12 women, representing 11.5% of the Federation's total.
By 2023, the IFJ had
documented 129 deaths, including 14 women, one of the deadliest years for
journalists since the IFJ began publishing its list of journalists killed in
1990.
MIDDLE EAST AND ARAB WORLD:
66
For the second year running,
it is the Middle East and Arab World region that holds the macabre record for
the number of journalists killed: 66 deaths in 2024.
The war in Gaza and Lebanon
once again highlights the massacre suffered by Palestinian (55), Lebanese (6)
and Syrian (1) media professionals, representing 60% of all journalists killed
in 2024. Since the start of the war on 7 October 2023, the number of
Palestinian journalists killed has risen to at least 138, making this country
one of the most dangerous in the history of modern journalism, behind Iraq, the
Philippines and Mexico.
On 13 October 2023, the IFJ
called on Unesco to protect journalists, establish a lasting ceasefire, open
humanitarian corridors for civilians, and allow Gaza journalists to take refuge
outside the enclave and foreign reporters to enter the enclave. All to no
avail.
Elsewhere in the region, the
Federation counts three media professionals murdered in Iraq this year,
including two women on 23 August, and a photographer killed in Syria on 4
December.
ASIA-PACIFIC: 20
In Asia-Pacific, the IFJ's
largest geographical region, the number of deaths in 2024 (20) was considerably
higher than in 2023 (12) and 2022 (16), with an upsurge in violence in South
Asia: the IFJ deplores 6 murders in Pakistan, 5 in Bangladesh and 3 in India,
i.e. 70% of all deaths in the region. In addition, the military regime in
Myanmar is continuing its hunt for journalists - 3 journalists have been killed
this year - while Indonesia and Kazakhstan have each had one death.
AFRICA: 8
8 journalists were murdered
in Africa in 2024 - 4 in 2022 and 9 in 2023 - but it was Sudan that paid the
heaviest price with 5 deaths, as a result of the generals' war, which is
particularly deadly. Two Somali journalists and a Chadian journalist also lost
their lives, which also testifies to the fragile and violent political
situations in these two countries.
AMERICAS: 6
Before the outbreak of the
war in Gaza, Latin America, and Mexico in particular, was one of the most
dangerous regions in the world for media professionals.
In 2024, the IFJ counts 6
deaths - compared to 30 in 2022 and 6 in 2023 - including five Mexicans and one
Colombian. Once again, threats, intimidation, kidnappings and murders are due
to reports on drug trafficking, which has plagued Mexico for more than two
decades.
EUROPE: 4
The war in Ukraine has again
claimed victims on the continent, with 4 journalists killed in 2024, compared
with 13 in 2022 and 4 in 2023. Despite this conflict, Europe remains the safest
continent in the world.
JOURNALISTS IN PRISON: 520
On 10 December 2024, the IFJ
counted 520 journalists in prison, representing a sharp increase compared with
2023 (427) and 2022 (375).
With 135 journalists behind
bars, China - including Hong Kong - remains the world's biggest prison for media
professionals, ahead of Israel (59 Palestinian journalists) and Myanmar (44).
The Asia-Pacific region alone
has 254 journalists in prison, ahead of wider Europe (142), the Middle East and
the Arab world (101), Africa (17) and Latin America (6).
0 Comments