Surge in journalist abductions in 2013: RSF

Daily News Egypt
3 Min Read
Photo taken on November 11, 2012 shows Turkish photojournalist Bunyamin Aygun working at Ceylanpinar in Urfa, near the Syrian border. Turkish photographer Bunyamin Aygun has disappeared in neighbouring Syria while covering the civil war there, his newspaper Milliyet said on December 17, 2013. "We haven't received any news from our journalist, who was on a reporting mission, for more than two weeks," an official from the Milliyet newspaper said.  (AFP PHOTO / BULENT KILIC)
Photo taken on November 11, 2012 shows Turkish photojournalist Bunyamin Aygun working at Ceylanpinar in Urfa, near the Syrian border. Turkish photographer Bunyamin Aygun has disappeared in neighbouring Syria while covering the civil war there, his newspaper Milliyet said on December 17, 2013.
(AFP PHOTO / BULENT KILIC)

AFP – Media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said Wednesday 71 journalists were killed in 2013, a slight fall from the previous year, but there was a surge in kidnappings.

“Syria, Somalia and Pakistan retained their position among the world’s five deadliest countries for the media,” the Paris-based watchdog said in its annual round-up of press freedom violations.

“They were joined this year by India and the Philippines, which replaced Mexico and Brazil, although the number of journalists killed in Brazil, five, was the same as last year.”

Overall, the number of journalists killed in connection with their work this year fell by 20% compared with 2012, which was an “exceptionally deadly” year with a total of 88 deaths, RSF said.

But there was a big increase in the number of journalists kidnapped, from 38 in 2012 to 87 in 2013 – more than half in Syria.

“Abductions gained pace in Syria in 2013 and became more and more systematic in nature, deterring many reporters from going into the field,” the watchdog said.

“At least 18 foreign journalists and 22 Syrian news providers are currently abducted or missing.”

Among the missing is James Foley, a US freelancer and AFP contributor who was seized by armed men in the northern province of Idlib in November last year.

Nearly 40% of the deaths this year occurred in conflict zones like Syria, Somalia, Mali or the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh, a resource-rich hotbed of left-wing extremism.

“The other journalists were killed in bombings, by armed groups linked to organised crime (including drug trafficking), by Islamist militias, by police or other security forces, or on the orders of corrupt officials,” the group said.

RSF said the violence of the Syrian conflict had forced at least 31 professional and citizen-journalists to leave their country this year.

“Many of them are now in Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon or Egypt, destitute and vulnerable,” it said.

“Victims of xenophobia and accused of being Muslim Brotherhood supporters in Egypt, interrogated and threatened by the security services in Jordan, and threatened by pro-Assad militias in Lebanon, their situation often continues to be extremely precarious.”

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