Watchdog: Hostility toward journalists rising worldwide

CEBU. Cebu-based media practitioners hold a vigil in front of the Manila Bulletin-Cebu office on D. Jakosalem St. in November 2009, as they seek justice for the death of the paper’s Mindanao-based reporter Alejandro “Bong” Reblando. Reblando was among the media practitioners killed in the Maguindanao massacre. (Allan Defensor/SunStar Cebu)
CEBU. Cebu-based media practitioners hold a vigil in front of the Manila Bulletin-Cebu office on D. Jakosalem St. in November 2009, as they seek justice for the death of the paper’s Mindanao-based reporter Alejandro “Bong” Reblando. Reblando was among the media practitioners killed in the Maguindanao massacre. (Allan Defensor/SunStar Cebu)

PARIS -- Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders said hostility toward journalists is growing worldwide, often encouraged by political leaders — even in democratic countries.

The group's annual global index of media freedom released Wednesday, April 25, found an overall rise in animosity toward reporters and a drop in freedoms, notably in former Soviet states but also in countries from the United States to the Philippines.

The group said many democratically elected leaders "no longer see the media as part of democracy's essential underpinning," singling out US President Donald Trump for his media-bashing. It also notes the recent killings of reporters in EU members Slovakia and Malta.

White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said it was "ridiculous" to suggest that Trump or his administration has halted freedom of the press.

"I think we're one of the most accessible administrations that we've seen in decades," Sanders said Wednesday. "I think by my mere presence of standing up here and taking your questions, unvetted, is a pretty good example of freedom of the press and I think it's ridiculous to suggest otherwise."

The media watchdog said authoritarian regimes are trying to "export their vision" that media should be compliant.

It said hate speech targeting journalists is amplified on social networks by government-friendly trolls in India, Russia and elsewhere. (AP)

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