World

2022 brought 50% surge in killings of journalists: Unesco

‘No safe spaces’ as around half were off duty when slain, organisation says

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 16 Jan 2023 9:30PM

2022 brought 50% surge in killings of journalists: Unesco
A mural depicting slain Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in the Arab town of Umm Al-Fahm in northern Israel. She was one of the more high-profile journalists who were killed last year. – AFP pic, January 16, 2023

PARIS – Killings of journalists and media workers surged 50% in 2022 to reach 86 worldwide, marking one death every four days, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) said today.

Last year’s increase followed three years with lower violence against reporters, with an average of 58 killings annually in 2019-21.

“After several years of consecutive declines, the steep rise in the number of journalists killed in 2022 is alarming,” Unesco director-general Audrey Azoulay said in a statement.

“Authorities must step up their efforts to stop these crimes and ensure their perpetrators are punished, because indifference is a major factor in this climate of violence,” she added.

Unesco found that no one was brought to justice in 86% of cases.

Motives for killings of journalists included “reprisals for reporting on organised crime, armed conflict or the rise of extremism, and covering sensitive subjects such as corruption, environmental crimes, abuse of power, and protests,” Unesco said.

At 44, more than half the journalists killed in 2022 were in Latin America and the Caribbean, and three-quarters of the killings took place outside of full-scale conflicts.

Mexico was the deadliest individual country with 19 journalists killed, followed by Ukraine, which has been battling the Russian invasion, at 10 dead, and Haiti at nine.

Unesco found that around half the journalists it recorded killed last year were off duty at the time, struck “while travelling, in their homes, or in parking lots and other public places where they were not on assignment”.

The trend “implies there are no safe spaces for journalists, even in their spare time,” the body added.

Beyond killings, reporters can face “multiple forms of violence” including “enforced disappearance, kidnapping and arbitrary detention, legal harassment and digital violence, particularly against women,” Unesco said. – AFP, January 16, 2023

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