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Press FreedomGlobal issues

Fewer journalists killed, more jailed in 2021

December 16, 2021

Reporters Without Borders is sounding the alarm — China, Belarus and Myanmar are among the worst culprits when it comes to jailing journalists, according to its latest press freedoms report.

https://p.dw.com/p/44Kby
Police arrest a journalist in Yangon
Myanmar has seen a surge in journalist detentions since the February coupImage: Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images

Times are tough for journalists.

Authoritarian regimes like Belarus, China and Myanmar are cracking down with increasing zeal against pro-democracy movements in their countries — with freedom of speech as a collateral casualty. And in Western democracies such as the United States and in Europe, populists and conspiracy theorists are increasingly threatening press freedoms, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The organization Reporters Without Borders (RSF) is sounding the alarm in its current annual roundup of violence and abuse suffered by journalists. Its press freedoms report concludes that ever more media professionals are being arbitrarily arrested while doing their job.

Journalist murders decrease slightly

In 2021, 46 journalists were killed — the lowest tally in many years. One reason for that, RSF says, is how tensions have decreased in regional conflict zones in Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

Katja Gloger, a board member of RSF Germany, added: "The most dangerous countries are Mexico, once again — with seven — and Afghanistan, with six journalists killed. Yemen and India each had four media workers killed in 2021."

Some 65 journalists are considered kidnapped, with the majority of the abductions in Syria, Iraq and Yemen. 

Graphic showing 488 journalists were detained worldwide, 363 professional journalists, 103 non-professional journalists, 22 media workers

More detained journalists than ever 

Yet in 2021, there were at least 488 journalists worldwide who were detained in connection with their work. This is the highest number the organization has ever recorded. The report clarified that 103 of these are not professional journalists; they are activists who express their views on social media.

For their work operating cameras, 22 people are in custody. And the number of female journalists imprisoned due to their profession increased by one-third, according to the report. 

Main culprits: China, Belarus and Myanmar

World map indicating arrested journalists in 2021

Reporters Without Borders points to five countries for the hike in detentions. RSF has logged 127 detained journalists in China, 53 in Myanmar, and 32 in Belarus. Vietnam and Saudi Arabia are also noted.

The report states that this "exceptional surge in arbitrary detention is mostly attributable to three countries whose governments are indifferent to their citizens' yearning for democracy. The magnitude of these figures is also indicative of an increasingly relentless crackdown on independent media."

Katja Gloger says: "The surge in numbers is also a result of new geopolitical power relations in which these regimes are getting too little pushback from the world's democracies."

One example: Disputed Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko is managing to suppress anti-regime protests and cling on to power only with brute force. But Russian President Vladimir Putin is supporting the autocrat — and international sanctions aren't having the desired effect.

Svetlana Tsikhanouskaya shows a photo of her jailed husband Siarhei Tsikhanouski
Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tsikhanouskaya advocated on behalf of her jailed husband, prominent blogger Siarhei TsikhanouskiImage: Vondrouš Roman/CTK/dpa/picture alliance

In a recent case to hit the headlines, a Belarus court sentenced prominent blogger and opposition figure Siarhei Tsikhanouski to 18 years in a penal colony.

Meanwhile in Myanmar, the number of journalists behind bars has jumped since the military coup in early February, according to the report. Only two prison inmates were recorded in 2020.

In China, the unprecedented number of detentions are partly due to Xi Jinping's increasing control over Hong Kong.

The RSF roundup states: "In this special administrative region, which used to be a regional model of respect for press freedom, and which had no imprisoned journalists, the national security law imposed by Beijing in 2020 has been used as a pretext for arresting and detaining at least 10 journalists as of December 1."

Poster mourning death of de Vries showing his face and reading: On Bended Knee Is No Way to Be Free
The killing of crime reporter Peter de Vries in the Netherlands was a shock in EuropeImage: Barbara Wesel/DW

Individual fates hang in balance

Behind every murdered or detained journalist, there is a name and an individual. Shahnaz Raufi was an Afghan journalist who was killed in March, in an attack claimed by the "Islamic State" militant group.

News of the murder of crime reporter Peter de Vries sent shockwaves across the Netherlands, Europe and beyond. 

A view of a banner Julian Assange supporters fixed to a railing, outside the High Court in London reading Free Assange No US Extradition
Supporters of press freedom has criticizued the decision of London's High Court to overturn the ban on Julian Assange's extradition to the USImage: Frank Augstein/AP Photo/picture alliance

The case of Australian Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has also been grabbing international attention again of late. On December 10, a British appeals court ruled that the 50-year old could be extradited to the United States after all, overturning an earlier judgment. He faces up to 175 years in jail if convicted of espionage charges.

RSF, which is headquartered in Paris and has 13 regional offices, was set up in 1985 and works for press freedom in more than 130 countries.

This article was originally written in German

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Jens Thurau Jens Thurau is a senior political correspondent covering Germany's environment and climate policies.@JensThurau