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		<title>Pope Leo XIV expresses solidarity for ‘persecuted’ journalists seeking truth, calls for their freedom</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/05/13/pope-leo-xiv-expresses-solidarity-for-persecuted-journalists-seeking-truth-calls-for-their-freedom/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 May 2025 00:19:58 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[By Devin Watkins of Vatican News Only four days have passed since his election to the papacy, and Pope Leo XIV has made it a point to hold an audience with the men and women who were in Rome to report on the death of Pope Francis, the conclave, and the first days of his ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Devin Watkins of Vatican News<br /></em></p>
<p>Only four days have passed since his election to the papacy, and Pope Leo XIV has made it a point to hold an audience with the men and women who were in Rome to report on the death of Pope Francis, the conclave, and the first days of his own ministry.</p>
<p>He met media professionals in the Vatican’s Paul VI Hall yesterday, and thanked reporters in Italian for their tireless work over these intense few weeks.</p>
<p>The newly-elected Pope began his remarks with a call for communication to foster peace by caring for how people and events are presented.</p>
<p>He invited media professionals to promote a different kind of communication, one that “does not seek consensus at all costs, does not use aggressive words, does not follow the culture of competition, and never separates the search for truth from the love with which we must humbly seek it.”</p>
<p>“The way we communicate is of fundamental importance,” he said. “We must say ‘no’ to the war of words and images; we must reject the paradigm of war.”</p>
<p><strong>Solidarity with persecuted journalists<br /></strong> The Pope went on to reaffirm the Church’s solidarity with journalists who have been imprisoned for reporting the truth, and he called for their release.</p>
<p>He said their suffering reminded the world of the importance of the freedom of expression and the press, adding that “only informed individuals can make free choices”.</p>
<p><strong>Service to the truth<br /></strong> Pope Leo XIV then thanked reporters for their service to the truth, especially their work to present the Church in the “beauty of Christ’s love” during the recent <em>interregnum</em> period.</p>
<p>He commended their work to put aside stereotypes and clichés, in order to share with the world “the essence of who we are”.</p>
<p><iframe loading="lazy" title="YouTube video player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/sXWnBAQuwSc?si=JyUwkbw6ZhDoJ09C" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen">[embedded content]</iframe><br /><em>Pope Leo XIV calls for release of journalists imprisoned for ‘seeking truth’   Video: France 24</em></p>
<p>Our times, he continued, present many issues that were difficult to recount and navigate, noting that they called each of us to overcome mediocrity.</p>
<p><strong>Facing the challenges of our times<br /></strong> “The Church must face the challenges posed by the times,” he said. “In the same way, communication and journalism do not exist outside of time and history.</p>
<p>“Saint Augustine reminds of this when he said, ‘Let us live well, and the times will be good. We are the times’.”</p>
<p>Pope Leo XIV said the modern world could leave people lost in a “confusion of loveless languages that are often ideological or partisan.”</p>
<p>The media, he said, must take up the challenge to lead the world out of such a “Tower of Babel,” through the words we use and the style we adopt.</p>
<p>“Communication is not only the transmission of information,” he said, “but it is also the creation of a culture, of human and digital environments that become spaces for dialogue and discussion.”</p>
<p><strong>AI demands responsibility and discernment<br /></strong> Pointing to the spread of artificial intelligence, the Pope said AI’s “immense potential” required “responsibility and discernment in order to ensure that it can be used for the good of all, so that it can benefit all of humanity”.</p>
<p>Pope Leo XIV also repeated Pope Francis’ <a href="https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/messages/communications/documents/20250124-messaggio-comunicazioni-sociali.html" target="_blank" rel="external noopener" rel="nofollow"><u>message</u></a> for the 2025 World Day of Social Communication.</p>
<p>“Let us disarm communication of all prejudice and resentment, fanaticism and even hatred,” he said. “Let us disarm words, and we will help disarm the world.”</p>
<p>The Paris-based global media freedom watchdog <a href="https://rsf.org/en/vatican-rsf-hails-pope-leo-xivs-commitment-press-freedom-calls-concrete-action" rel="nofollow">Reporters Without Borders (RSF) welcomed the Pope’s commitment</a> and has issued five concrete recommendations to the new head of the Catholic Church and Vatican City.</p>
<p>As censorship, misinformation and violence against journalists are on the rise worldwide, RSF has called on the Holy See to maintain a strong, committed voice for press freedom and the protection of journalists everywhere.</p>
<p>“The fact that one of Pope Leo XIV’s first speeches addressed press freedom and the protection of journalists sends a strong signal to news professionals around the world. RSF salutes Pope Leo XIV’s commitment to press freedom and calls on him to build on his declaration with concrete actions to promote the right to information,” said RSF director-generalThibaut Bruttin.</p>
<p>In his first Sunday noon blessing, Pope Leo XIV called for genuine peace in Ukraine and an immediate ceasefire in Israel’s war on Gaza.</p>
<p>“No more war,” the pontiff said, adding a warning against “the dramatic scenario of a third world war being fought piecemeal.”</p>
<p><em>Devin Watkins writes for Vatican News. Republished under Creative Commons.<br /></em></p>
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		<title>Myanmar: A nation in crisis as the covid pandemic takes hold</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2021/08/09/myanmar-a-nation-in-crisis-as-the-covid-pandemic-takes-hold/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2021 00:17:51 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Journalists already under threat of military arrest, jail and torture in Myanmar are now fronting a covid-19 national crisis as the virus rips through a country stripped bare, writes Phil Thornton. SPECIAL REPORT: By Phil Thornton of the International Federation of Journalists It is six months since Myanmar’s military began dismantling the institutional framework supporting ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Journalists already under threat of military arrest, jail and torture in Myanmar are now fronting a covid-19 national crisis as the virus rips through a country stripped bare, writes <strong>Phil Thornton</strong>.</em></p>
<p><strong>SPECIAL REPORT:</strong> <em>By Phil Thornton of the International Federation of Journalists</em></p>
<p>It is six months since Myanmar’s military began dismantling the institutional framework supporting the country’s fledgling democracy by propelling a deadly coup to wrest parliamentary control away from the newly-elected National League of Democracy (NLD) government.</p>
<p>Soon after the coup in February 2021, the military swiftly targeted voices of dissent and launched a deadly campaign of violence to silence critics. Rooftop snipers were ordered to shoot to kill, police and army raided homes of journalists, doctors, politicians and protesting citizens.</p>
<p>Independent media were outlawed and journalists were forced into hiding.</p>
<p>Critics of the “coup”, or even naming it as such in reporting or on social media, resulted in arrest warrants for breaches of section 505(a) of the Penal Code.</p>
<p>Non-profit human rights organisation Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) confirmed as of August 4, 2021, the military had killed 946 people, including 75 children and arrested 7051 protesters.</p>
<p>Among them, seven health workers have been killed, another 600 doctors and nurses have arrest warrants issued against them, a further 221 medical students have been arrested and 67 medical staff are in detention.</p>
<p>AAPP reported the military has arrested at least 98 journalists, six of whom have been tried and convicted. Journalists may have gone into hiding for their safety, but this hasn’t stopped the military targeting and threatening their families.</p>
<p><strong>A country in chaos<br /></strong> Myanmar is now in crisis. The economy has crashed. The already threadbare healthcare system has collapsed from the <a href="https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/region/myanmar" rel="nofollow">strain of the covid-19 pandemic</a>.</p>
<p>Military restrictions prevent people receiving medical treatment, while doctors and nurses continue to be arrested for protesting against the coup. Meanwhile, people infected by the covid-19 virus face certain death via the military’s heartless restrictions on hospitals, oxygen and medicine.</p>
<p>Doctors who manage to work from clandestine pop-up clinics are exhausted by the huge surge in cases needing treatment.</p>
<p>International health experts estimate as many as half the country’s population could become infected with the various covid-19 strains and the risk of death is high.</p>
<p>United Nation’s human rights expert Tom Andrews has urged Myanmar’s military at the end of July to join a “covid ceasefire” to combat the pandemic sweeping the country. But international pleas are unlikely to sway the military coup leaders or its puppet, the State Administration Council, now reformed as a caretaker government under the leadership of General Min Aung Hlaing as its so-called prime minister.</p>
<p>The military has a certain form when handling natural disasters — its strategy is to treat them as security threats. When Cyclone Nargis battered Burma on 2 May 2008, killing as many as 138,000 people and affecting at least another 2.4 million, the military’s response was to block international aid and jail those who reported on or tried to help storm victims.</p>
<p>The same strategy has been used with the ceasefires it negotiates with ethnic armed groups. A senior Karen National Liberation Army officer told the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) that ceasefires with the military produce little for the people.</p>
<p>“Our experience is they tie us up in endless meetings that yield little of value. They are a delaying tactic and we know they map our army positions and those of displaced people camps and later attack us as happened in March this year,” he said.</p>
<p>In March 2021, the Myanmar armed forces launched a series of airstrikes and ground attacks in ethnic regions that left as many as 200,000 villagers displaced. These people are now in desperate need of basic shelter, medicine, food and security.</p>
<p>The military’s go-to strategy is to block critical aid and medicine getting to displaced people and to jail and kill those it classifies as its enemies. Since the February coup, these “enemies” have included doctors, lawyers, politicians, community leaders, activists and journalists.</p>
<p>AAPP said people are now having to face the covid-19 pandemic with under-resourced hospitals and clinics with most unable to buy basic medicine from pharmacies that have run out of stock. Basic medicine is hard to find and expensive to buy.</p>
<p>The military is forcing public hospitals to close and is actively stopping people buying or refilling oxygen cylinders. Cemeteries and crematoriums are unable to cope with the huge numbers of fatalities, leaving corpses to pile up.</p>
<p>Through all this, the State Administration Council is accused by international, regional and opposition health professionals of withholding statistics and issuing false information.</p>
<p><strong>‘I’m only doing my job’<br /></strong> Senior journalist Win Kyaw, who is now in hiding on the Myanmar border, spoke with IFJ about the ongoing difficulties of trying to keep reporting six months on from the coup.</p>
<p>“I fled my home months ago. I left everything behind. Now it’s much worse for journalists worried about catching covid. We can’t move around because of soldiers at checkpoints checking phones and who we are. It is very hard to keep going,” said Kyaw.</p>
<p>He said there is no way to counterbalance the false information and quackery remedies circulating among people desperate for ways to combat the virus.</p>
<p>“Before the coup, I reported the first and second wave freely. We only worried about catching the infection. Authorities willingly gave us data, information. Since the coup it’s the opposite.</p>
<p>“The military is trying to arrest us, we have to work secretly, we can’t get any information from authorities or our old sources. How can people make informed decisions about treatments and what medicines to take with all the misinformation being spread?”</p>
<p>Win Kyaw has an arrest warrant issued against him for what the military claims are breaches of section 505(a) of the Penal Code.</p>
<p>“I was only doing my job as a journalist, but they saw our news coverage as a threat. If we are not allowed to do our job uncensored at such a critical time it causes all sorts of problems. People need to know what to do and what not to do during the pandemic.</p>
<p>“We also know important stories putting the military under scrutiny need to be reported. For example, what’s happened to the US$350 million donated to the country by the International Monetary Fund (to help prevent covid)? It’s important accredited journalists cover these stories and we are allowed to do our job.”</p>
<p>Win Kyaw acknowledges the difficulty of confirming actual death rates from covid-19 as the State Administration Council reports are sanctioned and approved by military leaders.</p>
<p>“We know the military is restricting oxygen and medical supplies and jailing doctors. We know people are dying in their thousands.”</p>
<p>A recent incident involving a senior Myanmar Army officer highlighted the need to keep the spotlight on corruption, he said. The story the journalist is referring to involved Myo Min Naung, an army colonel who ordered the seizure of 100 oxygen cylinders crossing from Thai border town Mae Sot to Myawaddy on the Myanmar side.</p>
<p>Myo Min Naung first denied he had taken the cylinders but was later quoted in state-owned media saying he had only “borrowed” the oxygen for emergency use in Karen State hospitals.</p>
<p>“This is a clear case of abuse of authority,” says Win Kyaw. “It was clear the oxygen had the official paperwork and been ordered by a Yangon charity to treat covid patients. As far as we know the oxygen has not been returned.”</p>
<p>The journalist is convinced the military is deliberately using covid-19 against citizens.</p>
<p>“Government hospitals are full – they cannot take anymore covid-19 patients. People are forced to rely on home treatment. Knowing this, the military blocked people refilling oxygen cylinders for private use, restricted medicine and closed hospitals – the military is using covid-19 as a weapon to kill people.”</p>
<p>Win Kyaw has just recovered from fighting the virus while in hiding.</p>
<p>“It was hard. Out of our seven people in the household, four were sick. We had the symptoms, we couldn’t get tested, we didn’t know if it was the flu or covid. We were lucky … we could get oxygen, medical advice and medicine.”</p>
<p>Every journalist the IFJ has spoken to during the past six months since he coup has either been infected and or had a family member die.</p>
<p>Despite knowing the risks and the fact that the military is actively hunting him, Win Kyaw is determined to keep reporting.</p>
<p>“Most of us don’t get salaries now, as most independent media houses have been outlawed by the military, but we feel we have a duty to cover the news as best we can.</p>
<p>“We have to try to travel to confirm stories and this puts us at risk. We need money for masks and PPE, medicine and oxygen concentrators.”</p>
<p>When their media organisations’ operating licences were cancelled by the military, many independent journalists had to go underground or risk arrest. Without paid work many journalists resorted to selling their equipment – laptops, drones, voice recorders and cameras – keeping only the essentials needed to keep reporting.</p>
<p><strong>People dying alone<br /></strong> Than Win Htut, a senior executive with the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), is still managing to send out regular daily reports despite having to hide on the border of a neighboring country.</p>
<p>Like other journalists interviewed, Than Win Thut is dismayed at the carnage caused by the military’s refusal to stop harassing and jailing doctors and let them tackle the pandemic as a public health issue.</p>
<p>“It’s sad. People are dying alone, collapsing in the street. Yet high ranking officers are taking oxygen and medicine for themselves and leaving lower rank soldiers to fend for themselves.</p>
<p>“The people have to manage the best they can, they can no longer expect anything from the government.”</p>
<p>Than Win Htut explains that reporting the health crisis is proving problematic.</p>
<p>“We cannot risk sending our reporters to confirm what’s happening at crematoriums or graveyards. Official sources won’t confirm or talk – they’re too scared.</p>
<p>“We keep in contact with our sources, but we can only manage to give estimates. State media can’t be relied on… nobody believes what it reports.”</p>
<p>The need for accurate reporting was never more important, he said.</p>
<p>“People are sceptical of vaccines, schools are closed, everywhere is overcrowded, there have been jail riots by anti-coup prisoners… unconfirmed killings of 20 jail protesters, doctors are being jailed, the cost of living is sky high, no work … no wages, medical supplies are being blocked… charity workers jailed.”</p>
<p>He says the pandemic has completely changed social media interactions.</p>
<p>“Facebook and social media sites have become our obituary pages. We see posts everyday of friends or their family members who have died. It’s tragic. We can’t do our job because the military has weaponised covid.”</p>
<p><strong>Lost hope waiting on UN intervention<br /></strong> Wei Min Oo is still managing to work for a news agency and told IFJ he is lucky he still has a job.</p>
<p>“When the junta closed eight independent media outlets, hundreds of employed journalists were suddenly forced out of work. Journalists, like everyone, have to eat.</p>
<p>“Some journalists have opened online shops, young ones have become delivery riders and some can’t do anything, but try to live on their meagre savings.”</p>
<p>Trying to report when you can be arrested for just doing your job is one of the big difficulties.</p>
<p>“We can’t carry our journalist’s IDs. We have to make sure our phones are cleaned off as anything like Facebook that could get us in trouble at checkpoints. No bylines on stories. Journalists have to rely on social media as sources.”</p>
<p>Wei Min Oo said the massive number of covid-19 infections in the community means that reporters dare not go to areas under martial law or known crisis areas for fear of being arrested.</p>
<p>The actions of the military during the pandemic has exposed its disregard for civilians and community institutions critical to a democratic society, according to Wei Min Oo.</p>
<p>“The military is taking its revenge on doctors, health workers, teachers, students, politicians and charity volunteers for taking a stand by striking and speaking out.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile,people in Myanmar are scathing of international interventions happening and have resigned to opposing the military alone, he said.</p>
<p>“People now say ‘we have lost hope any international intervention will come — if we want a revolution we have to do it alone through our Civil Disobedience Movement’.”</p>
<p><strong>There is no plan<br /></strong> Saw Win, a senior journalist who has worked in ethnic media for more than 20 years spoke to the IFJ about the greater effects the coup has had.</p>
<p>“The country is in chaos. The coup is a citizen’s nightmare. People have given up on international help. Working the borderline we see – displacement, refugees, corruption, armed conflict – any help will come with restrictions imposed on it by the military.</p>
<p>“Aid will eventually be allowed in and available, but it will not reach the people in need.”</p>
<p>Saw Win stresses the importance of accredited journalists being allowed to cover the pandemic.</p>
<p>“People don’t believe what they hear or see on state media. It’s total rubbish. Data, death rates, number of cases and health information are not believed. People joke the military run pictures and names of those they intend to arrest under 505(a) on state television and newspapers to get people to tune in – it’s the only item we can believe, the rest is useless.”</p>
<p>Covid’s impacts in the cities are worse than those experienced in rural areas, he says.</p>
<p>“We have pharmacies unable to buy or sell medicines, we hear of groups and individuals with links to the military profiting from selling oxygen cylinders, people can’t bury or cremate their loved ones, wet season floods, farmers not farming, food shortages, cooking oil prices have increased by as much as 33 per cent, essential shops are closing, refugee camps are struggling, there’s more than 200,000 displaced people in our region in desperate need of everything – these are all important stories our journalists need to keep covering.”</p>
<p><em><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/1677699.Restless_Souls" rel="nofollow">Phil Thornton</a> is a journalist and senior adviser to the International Federation of Journalists in Southeast Asia.</em></p>
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		<title>RSF’s 2021 ‘Press freedom predators’ gallery includes old tyrants, 2 women</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2021/07/08/rsfs-2021-press-freedom-predators-gallery-includes-old-tyrants-2-women/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2021 21:17:52 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has published a gallery of grim portraits — those of 37 heads of state or government who crack down massively on press freedom, reports RSF. Some of these “predators of press freedom” have been operating for more than two decades while others have just joined the blacklist, which for the first ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has published a gallery of grim portraits — those of 37 heads of state or government who crack down massively on press freedom, <a href="https://rsf.org/en/news/rsfs-2021-press-freedom-predators-gallery-old-tyrants-two-women-and-european" rel="nofollow">reports RSF.</a></p>
<p>Some of these “predators of press freedom” have been operating for more than two decades while others have just joined the blacklist, which for the first time includes two women and a European predator.</p>
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<p>Nearly half (17) of the predators are making their first appearance on <a href="https://rsf.org/en/portraits/predator" target="_blank" rel="noopener">the 2021 list</a>, which RSF is publishing five years after the last one, from 2016.</p>
<p>All are heads of state or government who trample on press freedom by creating a censorship apparatus, jailing journalists arbitrarily or inciting violence against them, when they do not have blood on their hands because they have directly or indirectly pushed for journalists to be murdered.</p>
<p>Nineteen of these predators rule countries that are coloured red on the RSF’s press freedom map, meaning their situation is classified as “bad” for journalism, and 16 rule countries coloured black, meaning the situation is “very bad.”</p>
<p>The average age of the predators is 66. More than a third (13) of these tyrants come from the Asia-Pacific region.</p>
<p>“There are now 37 leaders from around the world in RSF’s predators of press freedom gallery and no one could say this list is exhaustive,” said RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire.</p>
<p>“Each of these predators has their own style. Some impose a reign of terror by issuing irrational and paranoid orders.</p>
<p>Others adopt a carefully constructed strategy based on draconian laws.</p>
<p>A major challenge now is for these predators to pay the highest possible price for their oppressive behaviour. We must not let their methods become the new normal.”</p>
<figure id="attachment_60250" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-60250" class="wp-caption alignnone c2"><img decoding="async" loading="lazy" class="wp-image-60250 size-full" src="https://asiapacificreport.nz/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/RSF-Predators-gallery-full-2021-680wide.png" alt="The full RSF media predators gallery 2021. " width="680" height="217" srcset="https://asiapacificreport.nz/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/RSF-Predators-gallery-full-2021-680wide.png 680w, https://asiapacificreport.nz/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/RSF-Predators-gallery-full-2021-680wide-300x96.png 300w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 680px) 100vw, 680px"/><figcaption id="caption-attachment-60250" class="wp-caption-text">The full RSF 2021 media predators gallery. Image: RSF</figcaption></figure>
<p><strong>New entrants<br /></strong> The most notable of the list’s new entrants is undoubtedly Saudi Arabia’s 35-year-old crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, who is the centre of all power in his hands and heads a monarchy that tolerates no press freedom.</p>
<p>His repressive methods include spying and threats that have  sometimes led to abduction, torture and other unthinkable acts. Jamal Khashoggi’s horrific murder exposed a predatory method that is simply barbaric.</p>
<p>The new entrants also include predators of a very different nature such as Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, whose aggressive and crude rhetoric about the media has reached new heights since the start of the pandemic, and a European prime minister, Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, the self-proclaimed champion of “illiberal democracy” who has steadily and effectively undermined media pluralism and independence since being returned to power in 2010.</p>
<p><strong>Women predators<br /></strong> The first two women predators are both from Asia. One is Carrie Lam, who heads a government that was still democratic when she took over.</p>
<p>The chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region since 2017, Lam has proved to be the puppet of Chinese President Xi Jinping, and now openly supports his predatory policies towards the media.</p>
<p>They led to the closure of Hong Kong’s leading independent newspaper, <em>Apple Daily</em>, on June 24 and the jailing of its founder, Jimmy Lai, a 2020 RSF Press Freedom laureate.</p>
<p>The other woman predator is Sheikh Hasina, Bangladesh’s prime minister since 2009 and the daughter of the country’s independence hero. Her predatory exploits include the adoption of a digital security law in 2018 that has led to more than 70 journalists and bloggers being prosecuted.</p>
<p><strong>Historic predators<br /></strong> Some of the predators have been on this list since RSF began compiling it 20 years ago. Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution, were on the very first list, as were two leaders from the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Belarus’s Alexander Lukashenko, whose recent predatory inventiveness has won him even more notoriety.</p>
<p>In all, seven of the 37 leaders on the latest list have retained their places since the first list  RSF published in 2001.</p>
<p>Three of the historic predators are from Africa, the region where they reign longest. Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, 79, has been Equatorial Guinea’s president since 1979, while Isaias Afwerki, whose country is ranked last in the<a href="https://rsf.org/en/2021-world-press-freedom-index-journalism-vaccine-against-disinformation-blocked-more-130-countries" rel="nofollow"> 2021 World Press Freedom Index</a>, has been Eritrea’s president since 1993.</p>
<p>Paul Kagame, who was appointed Rwanda’s vice-president in 1994 before taking over as president in 2000, will be able to continue ruling until 2034.</p>
<p>For each of the predators, RSF has compiled a file identifying their “predatory method,” how they censor and persecute journalists, and their “favourite targets” –- the kinds of journalists and media outlets they go after.</p>
<p>The file also includes quotations from speeches or interviews in which they “justify” their predatory behaviour, and their country’s ranking in the World Press Freedom Index.</p>
<p>RSF published a list of<a href="https://rsf.org/en/news/rsf-unveils-202020-list-press-freedoms-digital-predators" rel="nofollow"> Digital Press Freedom Predators</a> in 2020 and plans to publish a list of non-state predators before the end of 2021.</p>
<p><em>Asia Pacific Report and Pacific Media Watch collaborate with the Paris-based RSF.</em></p>
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<p>Article by <a href="https://www.asiapacificreport.nz/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">AsiaPacificReport.nz</a></p>
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