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President Obama criticizes Eritrea, Zimbabwe on press freedom in Africa
U.S. President Barack Obama (photo: Getty Images)

President Obama criticizes Eritrea, Zimbabwe on press freedom in Africa

Jimma Times

U.S. President Barack Obama decried press freedom violations in the two African countries of Eritrea and Zimbabwe in a White House statement on Saturday in honor of World Press Freedom Day. This week, the Washington DC- based non-governmental organization Freedom House also published a report critical of the media scenes of several African nations, including Ethiopia, while Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) named Eritrea as the top jailer of journalists in Africa.

The Freedom House organization said press freedom is declining in many places around the world.  The international organization placed Eritrea, Zimbabwe, Libya and Equatorial Guinea in the bottom ten ranking in the world. It said several Zimbabwean journalists are being imprisoned, tortured and in some cases killed. Eritrea remains the only African nation without a private media while CPJ said three countries -- China, Cuba and Eritrea -- account for half of journalists imprisoned globally.

According to Freedom House, the Middle East and North African regions continued to have the lowest level of press freedom in the world in 2008. But some African countries continue to improve, with Ghana, Mauritius and Mali leading the way in the continent. Sierra Leone, Angola, Liberia and Comoros showed the most improvement in Africa. Namibia, Cape Verde and South Africa also have high rankings however conditions have declined inside these countries compared to the previous year.

Freedom House indicated that press freedom deteriorated in many areas globally, including in Iran and North Korea. It also criticized Israel for travel restrictions and military censorship imposed on the press during the conflict in Gaza as well as in Israeli-occupied territory of the West Bank. The organization said space for independent media shrunk significantly in countries like Russia, Ethiopia and The Gambia. It condemned punitive laws in countries like Ethiopia while media restrictions remain in the Ogaden region of southeastern Ethiopia.

Journalists are frequently intimidated and harassed by the government in Ethiopia, particularly outside the capital Addis Ababa, even though the country has one of the largest number of private newspapers and magazines in Africa. Since the brutal 2005 crackdown on the press in Ethiopia, Awramba Times, Harambe, Enku and Addis Neger are some of the critical papers that suffered under frequent government harassment. Several newspapers have been closed due to financial and security issues they faced, particularly in the rural parts of Ethiopia. A private Afaan Oromo paper, Yeroo, was one of those closed due to human rights and financial problems facing publishers in the country. Other private Ethiopian newspapers like Capital, SS Informer, Ethio Channel, Addis Admass, Mesenazeria, Daily Monitor, Reporter and Addis Fortune face less harassment but they work under pervasive self-censorship, according to CPJ. Critics say Ethiopia's defamation laws and heavy financial punishment on publishers are threatening the survival of the private media in the country.

The recent reports by Freedom House and CPJ were released to coincide with World Press Freedom Day on Sunday. Freedom House Executive Director Jennifer Windsor asked the Obama administration to adopt policies that will defend freedom of expression around the world. In addition to Eritrea and Zimbabwe, the statement by President Obama mentioned Azerbaijan, Cuba and Burma, where journalists are being actively harassed the most.

Post A Comment
Comments 16 comments for this article
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Added: May 02, 2009. 09:15 PM GMT
woyane and shabiya don't know the meaning of democracy. the most successful "liberation fronts" in history are the most closed organizations who use censorship to brainwash people.
if we look at this carefully, woyane and shabiya are simply continuing what they did before they got power
Opride
Added: May 02, 2009. 09:41 PM GMT
don't trust "Freedom House"
it is american government and CIA funded propganda organization
Anonymous
Added: May 02, 2009. 10:25 PM GMT
TPLF must be paying bribe for new lobysts to control the new obama govermnent
Anonymous
Added: May 02, 2009. 11:59 PM GMT
hegdef is being exposed evryday by human rights groups and obama will be more nightmare to isaias than bush ever was
Saleh
Added: May 03, 2009. 12:22 AM GMT
Life Long Oromia
Weyana regime passed a law that criminalize the NGOs who receive more than 10% of their income outside the country. They reason they criminalize those NGOs is simple. They don't want anything they're not "micromanaging"

If they allow freedom of press or movement they know they will lose power. Finfine is not Gonder. Weyana need to go where they came from"Gonder"
Oromia!!!
Anonymous
Added: May 03, 2009. 12:32 AM GMT
instead of worying about press freedom in eritrea obama should focus on the genocide in ethiopia under the ag*me regime
Anonymous
Added: May 03, 2009. 02:09 AM GMT
slave mentality
its shame that we worship western rankings and weasterners to tell us which african is beter
are we still colonized?? african governments should concern for their people and be judged ONLY by africans
Anonymous
Added: May 03, 2009. 03:53 AM GMT
well,zenawi has been torturing all ethio journalists into submision
worsthing is they do selfsensorship as their frends and colegeas flee out of country everyday
Anonymous
Added: May 03, 2009. 04:41 AM GMT
the so-called "freedom house" and cpj have ignored abuse by america in iraq and other place when CIA bombed al jazera tv stations

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/ny-la-woiraq1130,0,837306.story?page=1

U.S. military covertly pays to run stories in Iraqi press
Troops write articles presented as news reports. Some officers object to the practice
By Mark Mazzetti and Borzou Daragahi, Times Staff Writers
November 30, 2005
WASHINGTON -- As part of an information offensive in Iraq, the U.S. military is secretly paying Iraqi newspapers to publish stories written by American troops in an effort to burnish the image of the U.S. mission in Iraq.

The articles, written by U.S. military "information operations" troops, are translated into Arabic and placed in Baghdad newspapers with the help of a defense contractor, according to U.S. military officials and documents obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
Eri
Added: May 03, 2009. 05:02 AM GMT
obama should have mentioned ethiopia and the abusive TPLF regime
Anonymous
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