Watchdog: Thailand Sinks as Press Freedom Declines Globally

Junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in a December 2015 file photo.

PARIS — Thailand fell to the bottom quarter of 180 nations as media freedom around the world suffered a "deep and disturbing decline" under pressure by governments and businesses, an international media watchdog said Wednesday.

The report describes Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha as a “new predator of information,” citing verbal attacks and death threats made against journalists.

“The National Council for Peace and Order, Thailand’s military junta, exercises permanent control over journalists and citizen-journalists,” it says of Thailand. “Ubiquitous and all-powerful, the NCPO summons them for questioning and detains them arbitrarily.”

Thailand fell two places to rank 136th in the annual report from Paris-based Reporters Without Borders released Wednesday. The watchdog group said many of the world's leaders have developed "a paranoia" about journalism and are clamping down on the media, while coverage in privately-owned outlets is increasingly shaped by corporate interests.

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"The climate of fear results in a growing aversion to debate and pluralism," said Christophe Deloire, secretary-general of Reporters Without Borders. "Journalism worthy of the name must be defended against the increase in propaganda and media content that is made to order or sponsored by vested interests."

While Europe has the freest media, according to the report, some countries, such as Poland fell sharply on the press freedom index by tightening government control. In Hungary, the government has also sought to impose restrictions on press freedoms.

Journalists in the Middle East and Africa fell victim to terrorism, armed conflict and intimidation by authorities. In Latin America, reporters were constrained by organized crime, violence and corruption. In the United States, they faced cyber-surveillance.

The decline in media freedom was also observed in east Asian democracies such as Japan and South Korea, while in China, "the Communist Party took repression to new heights," the study said.

In post-Soviet countries, freedom has declined steadily, with many countries following the example of Russia, where government critics face persecution. Ukraine was a notable exception, seeing an improvement due to a decline in violence in the separatist conflict in the east of the country and some reform, though many problems still remain.

The index measures media pluralism, independence, the legal framework and the safety of journalists in 180 countries. It is based on a questionnaires filled out by experts around the world as well as on quantitative data on abuses and acts of violence perpetrated against reporters.

 

Story: Associated Press, Khaosod English

 

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