Reporters Sans Frontieres Red Card to Five
World Cup Participant Countries
The
World Cup is football`s biggest celebration. We certainly don`t want to spoil
it. But we have to note that five countries which have qualified are major
enemies of human rights, democracy and freedom. Saudi Arabia, China, Russia,
Tunisia and Turkey deserve a red card for the torture, acts of violence and
atrocities that go on there. In these countries, journalists and dissenters are
imprisoned, tortured and sometimes killed. This we must not forget. Even during
a football match."
Each
year, Reporters Without Borders publishes a list of "predators of press
freedom. Because the enemies of freedom of expression have faces, the
organisation has singled out 38 people and groups - heads of state and
government, warlords and leaders of criminal gangs. As the whole world prepares
to thrill to the talent of the footballers and the exploits of their teams,
Reporters Without Borders wants to remind people that the authorities in these
countries are "predators" who terrorise dissidents.
In
Saudi Arabia, the media is tightly controlled and anyone who criticises the
government, the royal family, the religious authorities or rulers of friendly
foreign countries goes straight to jail. Since the Internet arrived in the
country in 1999, it has been closely monitored by a department of the King
Abdul Aziz City for Science and Technology, that watches which sites are
consulted and blocks access to those considered contrary to good morals or to
Islam. The country`s ruler, Prince Abdullah ibn al-Saud, is one of the
predators of press freedom listed by Reporters Without Borders.
In China, the authorities have begun a purge of the media as next year`s
crucial congress of the ruling Communist Party approaches. At least five senior
editors were sanctioned and a dozen media outlets censored last year. Reporters
Without Borders regularly expresses indignation at such action against
journalists and other Chinese citizens who try to challenge the monopoly that
the state and the Communist Party have on information and to break the grip of
censorship.
In recent weeks, the arrest of a journalist, the closure of a magazine and the
prosecution of Falungong followers for distributing banned material to the
media, as well as a wave of repression in the Xinjiang region, have once again
shown that the Chinese government is imposing its control of the media by
force. At least nine journalists and 22 cyber-dissidents are currently
imprisoned in China. President Jiang Zemin is a designated predator of press
freedom.
In Russia, where murders of journalists and physical attacks on them are
increasing, legal harassment of some media has forced the country`s entire
press to censor itself. The government is pushing ahead with its takeover or
dismantling, through powerful state organisations, of national privately-owned
media belonging to press "oligarchs."
In
Chechnya, new restrictions on journalists have severely curbed freedom of information,
which had already been reduced by very cumbersome accreditation procedures. In
several of the autonomous Russian republics, the authorities have stifled all
criticism as elections approach. President Vladimir Putin is one of the
predators of press freedom condemned by Reporters Without Borders.
In Tunisia, opponents of President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali`s regime are under more and more pressure, including on their families. Two journalists are currently imprisoned. In recent years, many journalists have been obliged to work for the foreign media, create news sites on the Internet or even go into exile because they cannot operate as journalists in their own country. Sihem Bensedrine, who runs the online newspaper Kalima, was jailed for several weeks last summer after being subjected to a range of pressures. Government control of the means of