Turkey is no 154th in World Press Freedom Index (Not Good!)

Turkey now 154th in world press freedom index
ISTANBUL - Hürriyet Daily News July 25, 2013
Daily News Photo
Daily News Photo
Turkey has experienced another among fall down the ranks of Reporters Without Borders’ (RWB) World Press Freedom index, dropping to 154th on the list.

RWB stated that Turkey, a country of “political importance” amid the Syrian conflict, was “currently the world’s biggest prison for journalists.” The country suffered a six-slot fall, plummeting from 148th to 154th.

The report also targeted Turkey for failing to live up to its regional model aspirations “despite a varied and lively media” presence in the country. The Turkish state was criticized for pursuing “a paranoia about security, which has a tendency to see every criticism as a plot hatched by a variety of illegal organizations.”

The ongoing paranoia has intensified during the past year, which was “marked by a rising tension over the Kurdish question,” the organization said.

Syria, meanwhile, has become “the deadliest country for journalists,” taking one of the last spots, as journalists suffered both from the civil war and from government attempts to crack down on reporters.

The report also looked into some of the regional dynamics and noted especially Greece’ sharp drop down the list to number 84 as part of the “unraveling European model” that is otherwise filled with list-topping countries. Finland topped the list for the second year in a row.

Greek journalists are “exposed to public condemnation and violence from both extremist groups and the police,” the report said. Countries like India, China and Russia were also named among those falling short of their regional ambitions.

Regional scores from zero to 100 ended up as 17.5 for Europe, 30.0 for the Americas, 34.3 for Africa, 42.2 for the Asia-Pacific and 45.3 for Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The Middle East and North Africa region came last at 48.5.

The index focuses not on political developments but on “attitudes and intentions of governments toward media freedom,” with criteria ranging from “legislation to violence against journalists,” according to the organization.

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