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64 Journalists Killed Worldwide in 2007, Most Since '94

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  • 64 Journalists Killed Worldwide in 2007, Most Since '94

    64 JOURNALISTS KILLED WORLDWIDE IN 2007, MOST SINCE '94
    By Adam B. Ellick

    The New York Times
    Late Edition - Final
    December 18, 2007 Tuesday

    More journalists have been killed worldwide in 2007 than in any year
    since 1994, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, an
    independent group that promotes press freedom and defends the rights
    of journalists.

    In the committee's annual report to be released Tuesday, 64 journalists
    died in circumstances linked to their work in 2007.

    Nearly half of those deaths, 31, took place in Iraq, which was ranked
    as the deadliest country for journalists for the fifth consecutive
    year. Most of the killings were targeted attacks, as opposed to deaths
    caused by cross-fire, according to the committee.

    In Africa, the number of deaths rose to 10 this year from 2 in 2006,
    according to the committee's report. Somalia, the second deadliest
    country in 2007, accounted for 7 of those deaths.

    The committee's annual report tallies the deaths of journalists that
    result directly from combat, violence or a direct reprisal for a
    journalist's work, like the assassination of the Turkish-Armenian
    editor Hrant Dink, who was killed in January on a street in Istanbul.

    The report covers the period from Jan. 1 through Monday.

    In Iraq, the committee cites "unidentified gunmen, suicide bombers,
    and American military activity" as the main contributors to the deaths.

    "Working as a journalist in Iraq remains one of the most dangerous
    jobs on the planet," said Joel Simon, the executive director of the
    committee, which is based in New York. "These journalists gave their
    lives so that all of us could be informed about what is happening
    in Iraq."

    A mounting problem in Iraq is that international news agencies are
    circumventing their limited mobility by passing dangerous assignments
    to nonprofessionals who lack proper training, said Tala Dowlatshahi of
    Reporters Without Borders, another group that promotes press freedom.

    According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, all but one of
    the 31 victims in Iraq were Iraqi citizens, and 9 of them worked for
    international news outlets. Since the war began in March 2003, 124
    journalists and 49 support staff members have been killed in Iraq,
    according to the committee.

    In Africa, border disputes and tribal conflicts have created an
    increasingly dangerous climate for journalists. According to Reporters
    Without Borders' 2007 index, Eritrea replaced North Korea as the
    worst country for press freedom.

    Three Mexican journalists were killed in 2007, all of whom were
    reporting on ties between drug traffickers and the nation's police
    force and government, according to the committee. The committee's
    report cites a safer climate in Colombia, where no journalists were
    killed for the first time in 15 years, and in the Philippines, which
    had no work-related deaths for the first time in 9 years and has long
    been atop the list of the most deadly countries for journalists.

    Still, cases in each country remain under investigation.

    In the United States, the lone victim in 2007 was Chauncey Bailey,
    the editor in chief of The Oakland Post, a California weekly, who
    was killed while reporting on the finances of a local bakery.

    The 64 worldwide deaths cited by the Committee to Protect Journalists
    are 8 more than in 2006, and the second highest number since the
    committee started tracking journalist deaths in 1981. The most lethal
    year was 1994, when conflicts in Rwanda, Bosnia and Algeria contributed
    to the deaths of 66 journalists.

    In a separate tally, the committee counted 20 killings of news media
    staff members, like translators, guards and drivers, in 2007.

    The Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists reported
    that 175 journalists and support staff members died as a result of
    violence or accidents this year, including 69 in Iraq. Its results
    are on pace to match the results from last year, which according to
    federation figures was the deadliest year for journalists since it
    started tracking causalities a decade ago.
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