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In this section you
will find a Committee to Protect Journalists's list of journalists imprisoned in 2007, categorised by
country. A total of 127 journalists were imprisoned last year.
Newspapers
can freely publish the list, with credit to CPJ.
Publication embargo:
These materials should not be published before 3 May, World Press
Freedom Day.
New York, December 5, 2007 - Nearly 17 percent
of journalists jailed worldwide in 2007 were held without any publicly
disclosed charge, many for months or years at a time and some in secret
locations, the Committee to Protect Journalists has found in a new
analysis.
CPJ's
annual worldwide census of imprisoned journalists found 127 behind bars
on December 1, a decrease of seven from the 2006 tally. (Read detailed accounts of each imprisoned journalist.)
The drop is due in large part to the release this year of 15 Ethiopian
journalists who were either acquitted or pardoned of antistate charges
stemming from a broad government crackdown on the press. CPJ and others
had waged an intensive advocacy campaign on their behalf.
China,
which has failed to meet its promises to improve press freedom before
the 2008 Olympics, continued to be the world's leading jailer of
journalists, a dishonor it has held for nine consecutive years. Cuba,
Eritrea, Iran, and Azerbaijan round out the top five jailers among the
24 nations that imprison journalists.
Antistate
allegations such as subversion, divulging state secrets, and acting
against national interests remain the most common charge used to
imprison journalists worldwide, CPJ found. About 57 percent of
journalists in the census are jailed under these charges, many of them
by the Chinese and Cuban governments.
The proportion of journalists held without any charge at all
increased for the third consecutive year. Eritrea and Iran account for
many of these cases, but the United States has used this tactic as
well. U.S. authorities have not filed charges or presented evidence
against Al-Jazeera cameraman Sami al-Haj,
held for more than five years at Guantánamo Bay, or Associated Press
photographer Bilal Hussein, held in Iraq for more than 19 months. The
U.S. military said in November
that Hussein's case would be referred to Iraqi courts for prosecution
but continued to withhold details explaining the basis for the
detention.
"Imprisoning journalists on the basis of
assertions alone should not be confused with a legal process. This is
nothing less than state-sponsored abduction," CPJ Executive Director
Joel Simon said. "While we believe every one of these 127 journalists
should be released, we are especially concerned for those detained
without charge because they're often held in abysmal conditions, cut
off from their lawyers and their families."

The
practice of holding journalists without charge has eroded basic
standards of fairness and accountability. Iranian authorities, for
example, jailed Mohammad Seddigh Kaboudvand in July, but they have yet
to file formal charges or bring the editor before a judge. Kaboudvand's
lawyer has not been allowed to see him or review the government's case.
Eritrean authorities will not even confirm whether the journalists in
its custody are alive or dead. At least 19 journalists worldwide are
being held in secret locations, CPJ found, with Eritrea the worst
offender in this regard.
Continuing a decade-long
trend, Internet journalists make up an increasing proportion of CPJ's
census. Bloggers, online editors, and Web-based reporters constitute
about 39 percent of journalists jailed worldwide. Print journalists
make up the largest professional category, accounting for about half of
those in jail.
The
rise of Internet journalism and its risks are evident in China, where
18 of the 29 jailed journalists worked online. China's list includes Shi Tao, an award-winning journalist
serving a 10-year sentence for e-mailing details of a government
propaganda directive to an overseas Web site. The Internet giant Yahoo
supplied account information to Chinese authorities that led to Shi's
2004 arrest and triggered an ongoing debate over corporate
responsibility.
China continues to rely heavily on the
use of vague antistate charges, imprisoning 22 journalists on
accusations such as "inciting subversion of state power." Despite
China's 2001 promises to the International Olympic Committee that it
would ensure "complete media freedom," its leaders continue to jail
reporters and operate a vast system of censorship, CPJ found in a special report in August. CPJ has urged the IOC and the Games' corporate sponsors to hold Beijing accountable to its word.
"China
has remained the world's worst jailer of journalists from the day the
Games were awarded through today, just months before the Olympics are
scheduled to begin," said CPJ's Simon. "China and the IOC have an
obligation to make good on the broad promises made when Beijing was
selected. For the torch to be lit in Beijing next August as 29
journalists languish in jail would mock the ideals of the Olympic
movement."
Fidel
Castro 's absence from day-to-day power has not led to media reform in
Cuba, the world's second-leading jailer. Twenty-four Cuban journalists
are imprisoned, CPJ found, most of them swept up in a March 2003
crackdown on the independent press. Eritrea ranks third, with 14 jailed
journalists, all held in undisclosed prisons.
Two
countries--Iran and Azerbaijan--are new to the list of leading jailers.
Facing domestic dissent and economic troubles, Iranian authorities are
meting out harsher penalties to journalists. Twelve are now in Iranian
jails. One of them, Adnan Hassanpour, editor of the now-banned weekly Aso,
was sentenced to death after being convicted in January of endangering
national security and engaging in propaganda against the state.
Imprisonments
also spiked in Azerbaijan, where nine journalists are currently in
jail. The imprisoned ranks include editor Eynulla Fatullayev, whose
April arrest came shortly after he published an in-depth report
alleging an official cover-up in the 2005 slaying of fellow Azerbaijani
editor Elmar Huseynov.
CPJ research shows that journalist
imprisonments rose significantly after governments worldwide imposed
sweeping national security laws in the wake of the 2001 terrorist
attacks on the United States. Imprisonments stood at 81 in 2000 but
have since averaged 129 in CPJ's annual surveys.
Here are other trends and details that emerged in CPJ's analysis:
o In about 12 percent of cases, governments used a variety of charges
unrelated to journalism to retaliate against critical writers, editors,
and photojournalists. Such charges range from regulatory violations to
drug possession. In the cases included in this census, CPJ has
determined that the charges were most likely lodged in reprisal for the
journalist's work.
o Criminal defamation, the next most common charge, was lodged in about
7 percent of cases. Charges of ethnic or religious insult were filed in
about 5 percent of cases, while violations of censorship rules account
for another 2 percent.
o
Print and Internet journalists make up the bulk of the census.
Television journalists compose the next largest professional category,
accounting for 6 percent of cases. Radio journalists account for 4
percent, documentary filmmakers 2 percent.
o The
longest-serving journalists in CPJ's census are Chen Renjie and Lin
Youping, who were jailed in China in July 1983 for publishing a
pamphlet titled Ziyou Bao (Freedom Report). Codefendant Chen Biling was
later executed.
CPJ
believes that journalists should not be imprisoned for doing their
jobs. The organization has sent letters expressing its serious concerns
to each country that has imprisoned a journalist. In addition, CPJ sent
requests during the year to Eritrean and U.S. officials seeking details
in cases in which journalists were held without publicly disclosed
charges. CPJ's list is a snapshot of those
incarcerated at midnight on December 1, 2007. It does not include the
many journalists imprisoned and released throughout the year; accounts
of those cases can be found at www.cpj.org.
Journalists remain on CPJ's list until the organization determines with
reasonable certainty that they have been released or have died in
custody. Journalists who either disappear or are abducted by
nonstate entities, including criminal gangs, rebels, or militant
groups, are not included on the imprisoned list. Their cases are
classified as "missing" or "abducted." Details of these cases are also available on CPJ's Web site.
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