Hyderabad: The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the global voice of journalists, in its 30th annual report on the killing of journalists and media staff states that Mexico is the deadliest country for media professionals with 14 killings every year, topping the chart fourth time in five years.
The data suggests that a total of 2,680 journalistshave been killed since the IFJ started keeping count in 1990. A total of 65 journalists and media workers were killed worldwide in 2020 while doing their jobs, 19 more than those killed in 2019. The IFJ also reported that more than 200 journalists are currently jailed because of their work.
Journalists were killed in 16 different countries during targeted attacks, bomb attacks and crossfire incidents, says the report.
“The ruthless reign of crime barons in Mexico, the violence of extremists in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Somalia, as well as the intolerance of hardliners inIndia and the Philippines have contributed to the continued bloodshed in media,” said IFJ General Secretary Anthony Bellanger.
’’No democracy worthy of that name can jail messengers of freedom of expression,” Bellanger said.
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According to the reports, ten deaths were reported in Afghanistan, nine in Pakistan, eight in India, four each in the Philippines and Syria, and three each in Nigeria and Yemen. Killings were also reported from Iraq, Somalia while Bangladesh, Cameroon, Honduras, Paraguay, Russia and Sweden.