Reuters
- A view shows buildings damaged by what activists say were missiles
fired by a Syrian Air Force fighter jet belonging to forces loyal to
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, at Saqba area in
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - A heavy death toll in war zones such as Syria and Somalia made 2012 one of the bloodiest years for journalists, with 121 killed, an international journalists' group said on Monday.
The Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists (IFJ)
said the figure was up from 107 journalists and other media workers
killed in targeted attacks, bomb blasts and cross-fire incidents in
2011.
The heavy
casualties were the result of a "systematic failure by governments and
the United Nations to fulfill their international obligations to protect
and enforce journalists' basic right to life", the group said.
"The death toll for
2012 is another indictment of governments which pay lip service to the
protection of journalists but have consistently failed to stop their
slaughter," Jim Boumelha, IFJ president, said in a statement.
Syria, where more
than 45,000 people are estimated to have been killed in a 21-month
revolt against President Bashar al-Assad, topped the list of the most
dangerous countries for media in 2012, with 35 journalists or other
media workers killed.
The IFJ said 18 journalists had been killed in 2012 in Somalia, where African peacekeepers are battling al Qaeda-linked Islamist rebels, turned the country into a media killing field.
Organized crime in
Mexico and insurgents in Pakistan were blamed for the 10 journalists
killed in each of those countries during the year.
Five each were killed in Iraq and the Philippines.
The IFJ, which
represents more than 600,000 journalists in 134 countries, said that, in
many cases, journalists were deliberately targeted because of their
work and with the aim of silencing them.
The group said it
was counting on a new U.N. plan of action on the safety of journalists
to deliver.
The plan includes helping countries draw up laws promoting freedom of expression, awareness campaigns about media freedoms and threats to journalists, and guidance on keeping journalists safe.
The IFJ's figure
for journalists' deaths was higher than the total reported by a
Paris-based rights group on December 19. That group, Reporters Without
Borders, said 88 journalists were killed doing their job in 2012, more
than in any year since monitoring started 17 years ago.
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