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05/03/06
North
Korea, Myanmar and Turkmenistan top list of 10 'Most Censored
Countries'
By EDITH M. LEDERER
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- North Korea's media praises "Dear
Leader" Kim Jong-Il every day but never reported the
country's famine in the 1990s. Myanmar bans anti-government
sentiment in the media. Turkmenistan's dictator approves the
front pages of major newspapers -- and they always include
a photo of him.
The three nations topped the list of "10 Most Censored
Countries" issued by the Committee to Protect Journalists
on the eve of World Press Freedom Day. The other countries
were Equatorial Guinea, Libya, Eritrea, Cuba, Uzbekistan,
Syria and Belarus.
"People in these countries are virtually isolated from
the rest of the world," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper
said Tuesday. "They're kept uninformed by authoritarian
rulers who muzzle the media and keep a chokehold on information
through restrictive laws, fear and intimidation."
"We call on the leaders of these most censored countries
to join the free world by abandoning their restrictive actions
and allowing journalists to independently report the news
and inform their citizens," she said.
The list is the first on censorship issued by the committee.
Its regional staff, which researches press freedom abuses
around the world, rated the degree of censorship according
to 17 different benchmarks, including censorship regulations,
jamming of foreign news broadcasts, imprisonment and harassment
of journalists and the degree of state control of media.
The report noted that Equatorial Guinea's state-run radio
has described the president as "the country's God,"
and its only private broadcaster is owned by his son.
In Libya, which has the most tightly controlled media in the
Arab world, no news or views critical of Moammar Gadhafi are
allowed, and one critic who wrote for a London-based opposition
Web site was killed last year, it said.
Most countries on the list are ruled by one man who has remained
in power by manipulating the media and rigging elections,
the report said. Cooper said the media fosters personality
cults in Equatorial Guinea, North Korea and Turkmenistan,
where President Saparmurat Niyazov's image is constantly displayed
in profile at the bottom of television screens.
The committee cited another pattern which it called the "big
lie." In North Korea, for example, the official news
agency said Kim was so beloved that after a munitions train
exploded in April 2004, people rushed into burning buildings
to save his portraits before searching for family members
or saving household goods. The international press was barred
from the scene, where 150 people died and thousands were injured,
it said.
The report also "underscores how countries that censor
so heavily show a cynical disregard for people's welfare,"
Cooper said, citing Myanmar's "stifling of coverage of
the effects of the December 2004 tsunami."
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Uzbekistan
started to develop some independent media. But the dozen journalists
who witnessed the massacre of anti-government protesters at
Andijan in May 2005 have been forced to flee the country,
she said.
"All independent media and foreign media have been squeezed
out of Uzbekistan and we're now back to a situation that looks
pretty much like the Soviet era," Cooper said.
She called Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko's jailing
of reporters who covered the opposition's efforts to unseat
him in recent elections part of his government's "shameful
record" -- and she singled out Russia for refusing to
criticize it.
Other countries considered for the list included China, which
has been the world's leading jailer of journalists, and Zimbabwe,
where most of the independent media has been forced to flee
by President Robert Mugabe's government, Cooper said.
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