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Philippines, other democracies failing to solve journalists’ murders

Posted by: Alecks P. Pabico | May 1, 2008 at 12:10 pm
Filed under: Cross Border, Journalist Killings, Media

TWO days ahead of World Press Freedom Day commemoration on May 3, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) released its first Impunity Index that lists democracies from Colombia to India and Russia to the Philippines among the worst countries in the world at prosecuting journalists’ killers.

The Philippines was ranked sixth in a list of 13 countries (see complete list below) with an Impunity Index rating of 0.289 unsolved journalist murders per one million inhabitants, worse than countries like Afghanistan, Nepal, and Pakistan that are constantly wracked by internal strife and violence.

 
CPJ IMPUNITY INDEX
COUNTRY
INDEX RATING
RANK
Iraq
2.821
1
Sierra Leone
1.636
2
Somalia
0.610
3
Colombia
0.439
4
Sri Lanka
0.408
5
Philippines
0.289
6
Afghanistan
0.279
7
Nepal
0.185
8
Russia
0.098
9
Mexico
0.068
10
Bangladesh
0.056
11
Pakistan
0.051
12
India
0.005
13

Source: CPJ, 2008

   

Compiled for the first time this year, the CPJ Impunity Index calculates the number of unsolved journalist murders as a percentage of the population in each country. CPJ examined every nation worldwide for the period January 1, 1998, through December 31, 2007. Only those nations with five or more unsolved cases are included in this index. Cases are considered unsolved when no convictions have been obtained. (see detailed explanation of the methodology below)

Topping the Impunity Index are countries mired in conflict with the worst records for impunity — Iraq, Sierra Leone and Somalia. But CPJ pointed out that the majority of the 13 countries on the index are established, peacetime democracies such as Mexico that have functioning law enforcement institutions. Such a situation, it said, reflects the alarming failures by those elected governments to protect journalists and hold those responsible for the murders accountable.

“Every time a journalist is murdered and the killer is allowed to walk free it sends a terrible signal to the press and to others who would harm journalists,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “The governments on this list simply must do more to demonstrate a real commitment to a free press. Lip service won’t help save journalists’ lives. We are calling for action: thorough investigations and vigorous prosecutions in all journalist homicides.”

Read Joel Simon and Sheila Coronel’s op-ed piece, Impunity in the Philippines, published to coincide with the CPJ’s launch of the Impunity Index.

The advance release of the index, CPJ said, is intended to raise awareness about a disturbing pattern of impunity in these 13 countries across the globe.

CPJ also found that:

  • Journalists in South Asia are particularly vulnerable. Countries from that region make up almost half of the index. They include Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India.
  • Even in countries in conflict, such as Iraq, the vast majority of journalist deaths are homicides, not a product of crossfire.
  • Local reporters covering their home countries are most vulnerable. Most of the murders ranked in the Impunity Index were local journalists in their home countries.

In November, CPJ launched a Global Campaign Against Impunity. CNN chief international correspondent and CPJ board member Christiane Amanpour wrote about impunity in her preface to CPJ’s annual report, Attacks on the Press, and spoke about it in a video earlier this year.

The Index

Here are the 13 countries where journalists are murdered on a recurring basis and governments are unable or unwilling to prosecute the killers.

1. Iraq

Iraq became the world’s most dangerous country for the press after the 2003 U.S. invasion led to armed conflict and sectarian strife. Journalists have generally not died in combat, however. Most are targeted for professional reasons and murdered. Most of the victims, such as Al-Arabiya correspondent Atwar Bahjat, are Iraqis. Seventy-nine cases are unsolved.

Impunity Index Rating: 2.821 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

2. Sierra Leone

The 11-year civil war, which ended in 2002, took a great human toll across Sierra Leonean society. Nine journalist murders remain unsolved. Many of these cases stem from a particularly brutal period in January 1999, when rebels took the capital, Freetown. More recently, however, newspaper editor Harry Yansaneh was beaten to death in 2005, allegedly by a member of parliament and her relatives.

Impunity Index Rating: 1.636 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

3. Somalia

Run largely by competing warlords since 1991, Somalia remains fragmented since Ethiopian troops helped install a central government in late 2006. No convictions have been obtained in five journalist murders. They include the slayings of radio journalists Mahad Ahmed Elmi and Ali Sharmarke, who were killed within hours of each other on August 11, 2007.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.610 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

4. Colombia

The conflict among right-wing paramilitaries, leftist guerillas, and government forces has led to dozens of journalist deaths. In the vast majority of cases, journalists were targeted for their coverage and murdered. At least 20 cases are unsolved, including the 2003 slaying of the nationally known investigative reporter Guillermo Bravo Vega.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.439 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

5. Sri Lanka

Fighting between government and separatist forces has long bled the nation. But journalists are more likely to be assassinated than to die in crossfire, with many of the victims ethnic Tamils. The victims include senior Tamil journalist Mylvaganam Nimalrajan, shot in his home in 2000. Nimalrajan’s murder is among eight unsolved cases here.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.408 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

6. Philippines

While the country has a free and vibrant press, journalists covering corruption, crime, and politics have repeatedly been targeted with violence. Broadcast commentators and reporters in provincial regions are especially vulnerable. Politicians and police have been implicated in a number of slayings, but corruption in the local court system has stymied efforts to prosecute. No convictions have been obtained in 24 cases.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.289 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

7. Afghanistan

Despite the prolonged armed conflict in Afghanistan, journalists are more likely to be targeted for murder than to be killed in a combat situation. Seven cases are unsolved, including the 2007 slaying of local reporter Ajmal Naqshbandi. Running counter to the international trend, most victims have been foreign rather than local reporters.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.279 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

8. Nepal

Political instability and conflict between the government and Maoist insurgents have challenged Nepal, where five journalist murders remain unsolved. Four of the victims were abducted and executed while in captivity. All were local journalists. They include Birendra Shah, a radio and print journalist who was kidnapped and slain in 2007.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.185 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

9. Russia

Business, official corruption, and human rights abuses are among Russia’s most dangerous beats. Fourteen journalists have been murdered with impunity since 1998. They include the well-known investigative reporter Anna Politkovskaya, shot in her apartment building in 2006, and the American editor Paul Klebnikov, gunned down on a Moscow street in 2004.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.098 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

10. Mexico

Drug trafficking, organized crime, and official corruption are Mexico’s deadliest beats. No convictions have been obtained in seven journalist murders. Most of the victims were local reporters, such as Francisco Ortiz Franco, a top editor for the muckraking Tijuana weekly Zeta who was shot in the middle of the day on a downtown street in 2004.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.068 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

11. Bangladesh

Political instability and entrenched corruption are the toughest stories to cover in Bangladesh. Eight journalist murders are unsolved. The victims were all local reporters, and include the veteran correspondent Manik Saha, killed when leftists threw a bomb into his rickshaw in 2004.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.056 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

12. Pakistan

Political unrest, sectarian strife, and tribal warfare confront Pakistan. Eight Pakistani journalists have been murdered with impunity since 1998. The victims include reporter Hayatullah Khan, who was kidnapped in the tribal region of North Waziristan in 2005 and found dead several months later.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.051 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

13. India

The world’s largest democracy also has one of the world’s freest presses, but in India, as elsewhere, politics and organized crime are dangerous stories to cover. Five murder cases are unsolved. All of the victims were local reporters. Among them is newspaper reporter Prahlad Goala, who was run down by a truck and then stabbed in 2006 after writing about timber smuggling.

Impunity Index Rating: 0.005 unsolved journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants

The Methodology

CPJ defines murder as a deliberate attack against a specific journalist in relation to the victim’s work. Murders make up more 70 percent of work-related deaths among journalists, according to CPJ research. This index does not include cases of journalists killed in combat or while carrying out dangerous assignments such as coverage of street protests.

Where available, population data from the World Bank’s 2007 World Development Indicators was used in this index. To determine the populations of Iraq and Afghanistan, CPJ relied on the U.N. Population Division’s World Population Prospects: The 2006 Revision Population Database.

CPJ consulted Mary Gray, professor of mathematics and statistics at American University in Washington, in compiling this index. Gray has served on the boards and committees of groups such as Amnesty International. In 2001, President George W. Bush awarded Gray the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring. CPJ is grateful to Gray for her assistance.

CPJ’s Impunity Index, compiled for the first time this year, looks specifically at unsolved journalist murders. On an ongoing basis, CPJ maintains a comprehensive database of all journalists killed in the line of duty and narrative capsules that detail the circumstances of each case.



4 people have left comments

i remember an older pcij post which categorizes the killing of two comelec lawyers as “Lesser Known Garci Tapes Personalities Making the News” instead of the the proper heading: “Comelec Lawyers, Murdered”.

media practitioners who died trying to bring the news to the public either motivated by a great sense of patriotism or purely for money were appropriately reported as “Journalist Murders” instead of “Media Practioners, In the News Instead of Writing the News”.

u can easily discern the bias of a media if you see one. but as i have consistently said, i am not a bit bothered by media bias as long as they allow me to post my own bias.

jcc wrote on May 1, 2008 - 9:01 pm | Visit Link

My Dear Fellowmen,

Do we have the right to kill our fellowmen, be they journalists or not? According to the Holy Spirit we talk to, we don’t have that right because we are not the one who gave life to the person. This is what the fifth commandment says of the Ten Commandments in Exodus 20:13 – “Thou shalt not kill.” It is only God who has that right to take life because He is the one who gave it. Our life came from God. We owe our life to God. Don’t we see that there are people who die because it is his time?

Those who do this dastardly act of killing their fellowmen, those who do “salvaging”, even though no one has seen the crime, even though they escape punishment by the courts here on Earth, will face the highest court, the court in Heaven, which will be fair and just. And if this court rules that the person will be sentenced to Hell, so be it and suffer there for eternity. Remember, “sin on earth is shouting in Heaven” for nothing is hidden. Nothing is unknown to God.

Why would one has to cover a wrong with another wrong? Be righteous in the first place. If you are a journalist, be truthful and don’t make propaganda to advance what is wrong.

Let us learn to love our fellowmen. Avoid even planning to liquidate those who oppose us. There is God in Heaven who knows everything we do, we say, and we think. We will be accountable to Him on Judgment Day.

With love, your brother in Jesus,
Peace Crusader
Echo of the Holy Spirit
Motto: pro aris et focis
“The Internet is mightier than the sword.”

PeaceCrusader wrote on May 2, 2008 - 1:40 pm | Visit Link

Philippines vs Journalists’ Killings?

Nothing’s new but pure lip service.

rivergel wrote on June 27, 2008 - 9:22 pm | Visit Link

[...] as last year, the Philippines ranked sixth in a list of 14 countries with an impunity rating of 0.273 unsolved [...]

The Daily PCIJ » Blog Archive » Among ‘peacetime democracies,’ Philippines worst at solving press murders – CPJ wrote on March 24, 2009 - 1:15 pm | Visit Link

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