At least 60 journalists around the world
were killed in 2014 while on the job or because of their work, and 44
per cent of them were targeted for murder, the Committee to Protect
Journalists said, CBS reports.
An “unusually high proportion,” or about
one-fourth, of those killed were international journalists, though the
overwhelming number of journalists threatened continue to be local, the
New York-based organisation’s new report said.
Those killed in 2014 include Anja Niedringhaus, a photographer for The Associated Press who was shot to death while covering elections in Afghanistan.
The CPJ report released early
Tuesday said the number of journalists killed in 2014 was down from 70
the year before, but the past three years have been the deadliest since
the organization started compiling such records in 1992.
The crushing conflict in Syria, now well
into its fourth year, has been a major factor. The report said at least
17 journalists were killed there this year, with at least 79 killed
since the fighting began in 2011.
Syria was connected to two of the more
horrifying killings of journalists this year, the beheadings by the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria of American freelancers James Foley and
Steven Sotloff. Both had disappeared while reporting on the conflict.
The CPJ reported at least 70
journalists, including Foley, have died covering the conflict in Syria
since 2011. Of those nearly half – 46 per cent – were freelance
reporters, which is significantly higher than the percentage of
freelance journalists killed worldwide. In 2011, 2012 and 2013,
one-third of journalists killed worldwide were freelancers.
“CPJ has never documented so many abductions in a conflict zone” than in Syria, Courtney Radsch, CPJ’s advocacy director, told CBS News. “We’ve recorded more than 80 journalists who have been abducted in Syria since 2011.”
The conflict in Ukraine between the new
government and Russian-backed separatists saw five journalists and two
media workers killed as relations between neighboring Russia and the
West sank to their lowest level since the Cold War. The killings were
the first that the CPJ had recorded in Ukraine since 2001.
Fifty days of fighting in Gaza between
Israel and the Palestinians over the summer saw at least four
journalists and three media workers killed, including AP video journalist Simone Camilli and translator Ali Shehda Abu Afash who were killed by an explosion of leftover ordnance.
In Iraq, at least five journalists were
killed, three of them while covering the fight against the Islamic State
group as it swept through the country’s northwest.
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