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Reporters Without Borders activists paste up posters of presidents Putin, Xi and al-Assad. Press freedom deteriorated in 2015, the group says.
Reporters Without Borders activists paste up posters of presidents Putin, Xi and al-Assad. Press freedom deteriorated in 2015, the group says. Photograph: Benoit Tessier/Reuters
Reporters Without Borders activists paste up posters of presidents Putin, Xi and al-Assad. Press freedom deteriorated in 2015, the group says. Photograph: Benoit Tessier/Reuters

'Era of propaganda': press freedom in decline, says Reporters Without Borders

This article is more than 7 years old

Decline of open debate was of particular concern in Latin America during 2015, says advocacy group, warning of increasing violence against journalists

World press freedom deteriorated in 2015, especially in the Americas, advocacy group Reporters Without Borders said on Wednesday as it released its annual rankings and warned of “a new era of propaganda”.

The World Press Freedom Index ranks 180 countries on indicators such as media independence, self-censorship, the rule of law, transparency and abuses.

This year’s index saw a decline in all parts of the world, said Christophe Deloire, secretary general of the Paris-based group, with Latin America of particular concern.

“All of the indicators show a deterioration. Numerous authorities are trying to regain control of their countries, fearing overly open public debate,” he said.

“Today it is increasingly easy for powers to appeal directly to the public through new technologies, and so there is a greater degree of violence against those who represent independent information.

“We are entering a new era of propaganda where new technologies allow the low-cost dissemination of their own communication, their information, as dictated. On the other side, journalists are the ones who get in the way.”

The situation was particularly grave in Latin America, the report said, highlighting “institutional violence” in Venezuela and Ecuador, organised crime in Honduras, impunity in Colombia, corruption in Brazil and media concentration in Argentina as the main obstacles to press freedom.

Among the lowest ranked countries were Syria, at 177th place out of 180, just below China (176th) but above North Korea (179th) and last placed Eritrea.

Japan slumped to 72nd due to what the watchdog identified as self-censorship towards the prime minister, Shinzo Abe, while Finland retained its top spot for the sixth consecutive year, followed by the Netherlands and Norway.

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