Reporters Without Borders

Reporters Without Borders, or RWB (French: Reporters sans frontières, Spanish: Reporteros Sin Fronteras, or RSF, Persian: گزارشگران بدون مرز, Arabic: مراسلون بلا حدود‎) is a Paris-based international non-governmental organization that advocates freedom of the press. It was founded in 1985 by current Secretary General Robert Ménard, Rony Brauman (then president of Doctors Without Borders) and the journalist Jean-Claude Guillebaud.[1]

Contents

Press freedom

RWB was founded in Montpellier, France in 1985. At first, the association was aimed at promoting alternative journalism, but before the failure of their project, the three founders stumbled on disagreements between themselves.[1] Finally, only Robert Ménard stayed and became its Secretary General. Ménard changed the NGO's aim towards freedom of press.[1]

Reporters Without Borders states that it draws its inspiration from Article 19 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, according to which everyone has "the right to freedom of opinion and expression" and also the right to "seek, receive and impart" information and ideas "regardless of frontiers." This has been re-affirmed by several charters and declarations around the world. In Europe, this right is included in the 1950 Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

Reporters Without Borders is a founding member of the International Freedom of Expression Exchange, a virtual network of non-governmental organisations that monitors free expression violations worldwide and defends journalists, writers and others who are persecuted for exercising their right to freedom of expression.

In 2005, Reporters Without Borders shared the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought with Nigerian human rights lawyer Hauwa Ibrahim and Cuba's Ladies in White movement.[2]

Over the years, RWB has published several books to raise public awareness of threats to press freedom around the world. A recent publication is the Handbook for Bloggers and Cyber-Dissidents,[3] which was launched in September 2005. The handbook provides technical tips on how to blog anonymously and avoid censorship. It includes contributions from well-known blogger-journalists Dan Gillmor, Jay Rosen and Ethan Zuckerman.

Worldwide Press Freedom Index

2007 press freedom rankings

RWB compiles and publishes an annual ranking of countries based upon the organization's assessment of their press freedom records. Small countries, such as Malta and Andorra, are excluded from this report. The 2008 list was published on 21 October 2008.

The report is based on a questionnaire sent to partner organisations of Reporters Without Borders (14 freedom of expression groups in five continents) and its 130 correspondents around the world, as well as to journalists, researchers, jurists and human rights activists.[4]

The survey asks questions about direct attacks on journalists and the media as well as other indirect sources of pressure against the free press. RWB is careful to note that the index only deals with press freedom, and does not measure the quality of journalism. Due to the nature of the survey's methodology based on individual perceptions, there are often wide contrasts in a country's ranking from year to year.

Funding

According to RWB, its total budget is of €4,000,000, mostly financed by sale of photo-albums (of which the authors freely grant copyright, and which are freely distributed by the Nouvelles Messageries de la presse parisienne, NMPP [5]), as well as extras such as T-shirts, etc [5].

More than 20% of its funding comes from private groups, such as Sanofi-Aventis (€400,000, 10% of its budget [5]), François Pinault, the Fondation de France, the Open Society Institute of George Soros, the Sigrid Rausing Trust, Benetton, or the anti-Castrist Center for a Free Cuba (which gives it €64,000).[6][5]. Furthermore, Saatchi & Saatchi has realized various communication campaigns of RWB for free (for instance, concerning censorship in Algeria[7]).

Some of its funding (19% of total) comes from North American and European governmental organisations, among them the American National Endowment for Democracy (NED).[8][9] According to RWB president Robert Ménard, the donations from the French government account for 4,8% of RWB's budget; the total amount of governmental aid being 11% of its budget (including money from the French government, the OSCE, UNESCO and the Organisation internationale de la francophonie).[10]

Both the NED and the Centre for a Free Cuba are funded by the US Government. However, Daniel Junqua, the vice-president of the French section of RWB (and also vice-president of the NGO Les Amis du Monde diplomatique), claims that the NED's funding, which reachs an amount of €35,000 [5], does not compromise RWB's impartiality.[10]

RSF's Chinese website credits support from Taiwan Foundation for Democracy,[11] a quasi-government organization funded by the ROC Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[12]

The NGO, which has 25 full-time employees, pays its director Ménard (as well as a marketing expert, formerly at Price Waterhouse) around €5,000 per month [5].

Controversy and campaigns

Robert Ménard on torture

In an interview with France Culture, whilst speaking about the case of the kidnapped journalist Daniel Pearl, RWB president Robert Ménard discussed the use of torture.[13] Menard told France Culture:

Where do we stop? Shall we accept this logic that consists of… since we could do it in some cases, ‘you kidnap, we kidnap; you mistreat, we mistreat; you torture, we torture …?

What justifies…? Perhaps in order to free somebody, can we go there? It is a real question.

That is real life, it is that, what François just said: we are no longer in ideas, it is war, we are no longer dealing with principles. I don’t what to think. Because this happens to Marianne Pearl, I’m not saying, I’m not saying that they made a mistake because she thought that it was appropriate to do it, that it was necessary to do that, that her husband had to be saved, she was pregnant… for the sake of the baby that was going to be born, everything was permitted.

And it was absolutely necessary to save him and if it was necessary to attack a certain number of people, they had to attack a certain number of people, physically attack them, you understand, threatening them and torturing them, even though we might have to kill some.

I don’t know, I am lost. Because sometimes I don’t know where you have to stop, where you have to put on the brakes. What is acceptable and what is unacceptable? And at the same time, for the families of those that were kidnapped, because many times they are the people we talk to first, in Reporters without Borders; legitimately, I, if my daughter were kidnapped there would be no limit, I tell you, I tell you, there would be no limit on torture.[14]

Relationship with Otto Reich

Lucie Morillon, RWB's Washington representative, confirmed in an interview on 29 April 2005 that the organization has a contract with US State Department's Special Envoy to the Western Hemisphere, Otto Reich, who signed it in his capacity as a trustee for the Center for a Free Cuba, to inform Europeans about the repression of journalists in Cuba.[15]

The Otto Reich link has been controversial: when Reich headed the Reagan administration's Office of Public Diplomacy in the 1980s, the body partook in what its officials termed “White Propaganda” – covert dissemination of information to influence domestic opinion regarding US backing for military campaigns against Left-wing governments in Latin America.[16] An investigation into the Office’s activities by the US Comptroller-General found that under Otto Reich it was engaged in "prohibited, covert propaganda activities ... beyond the range of acceptable agency public information activities".[17]

In 2002, Reich was appointed to the visiting board of the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation,[18] which was formerly known as the School for the Americas, and described in 2004 by the LA Weekly as a “torture-teaching institution”.[19] According to Amnesty International, the School in the past has produced training manuals which advocated torture, blackmail, beatings and executions.[20]

Reacting to Otto Reich’s appointment to the visiting board, School of the Americas Watch said, “Reich on a board charged with monitoring the human rights integrity of an institution as notorious as this one is like the fox guarding the henhouse. His appointment to this position exposes the rubber-stamp character and hypocritical function of such a board…The underlying objective of both the school and Mr. Reich is to continue to control the economic and political systems of Latin America by training and arming Latin American militaries.”[21]

According to critics, Reich has a “Stalinist-type contempt for press freedom”.[22] In the 1980s it is alleged that he conducted sex smears against journalists critical of the Contra rebel group in Nicaragua.[22] Reich himself has joked about his attitude to criticism - in 2002 in mock indignation he joked that opponents had "said that I can't make rational decisions because of my ideology. Well, they are not saying that anymore, because I had them all arrested this morning."[23]

Under the contract signed with Reich, Reporters Without Borders received $50,000 in 2004 from the Center for Free Cuba.[24]

Cuba

Tensions between Cuban authorities and RWB are high, particularly after the imprisonment in 2003 of 75 dissidents (27 journalists) by the Cuban Government, including Raúl Rivero and Oscar Elías Biscet. RWB describes the Cuban regime as "totalitarian" and engages in direct campaigning against Castro's regime.[25] RWB has been described as an "ultra-reactionary" organization by the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party, Granma.[25]

Lucie Morillon, RWB's Washington representative, confirmed in an interview on 29 April 2005 that the organization receives money from the Washington-based Center for a Free Cuba ($50,000 in 2004), and that a contract with the US State Department's Special Envoy to the Western Hemisphere, Otto Reich, requires them to inform Europeans about repression against journalists in Cuba. However, the organisation has denied that its campaigning on the issue of Cuba—in declarations on radio and television, full-page ads in Parisian dailies, posters, leafletting at airports, and an April 2003 occupation of the Cuban tourism office in Paris—were related to the payments.[26] 1.3% of total funding came from this source.[27]

A Paris court (tribunal de grande instance) ordered RWB to pay 6,000 Euros to the daughter and heir of Alberto Korda for non-compliance with a court order of 9 July 2003 banning it from using Korda’s famous (and copyrighted) photograph of Ernesto "Che" Guevara in a beret, taken at the funeral of La Coubre victims. RWB said it was "relieved" it was not given a harsher sentence.[25][28] The face had been superimposed by RSF with that of a May 1968 CRS anti-riot police agent, and the postcard handed out at Orly Airport in Paris to tourists boarding on flights for Cuba. Korda's daughter declared to Granma that "Reporters Without Borders should call themselves Reporters Without Principles."[29] Headed by Robert Ménard, RWB also burst into the Cuban Tourism Office in Paris on 4 April, 2003, obstructing the running of the office for nearly four hours.[30][31] On April 24, 2003, RWB organized a demonstration outside the Cuban embassy in Paris.[30]

RWB claims it has been the target of hostility from the Cuban authorities since the arrest of 75 dissidents in March 2003. Cuba’s representatives have called for the withdrawal of its consultative status with the United Nations. RWB lost its UN approved NGO status for one year in July 2003 at the request of Cuba and Libya, as a result of protests against Libya receiving the chairmanship of the United Nations Human Rights Committee in Geneva, during the committee's opening session.[32]

Western intelligence agencies

According to an article published in the Frontline, Reporters Without Borders is reputed for having strong ties with the intelligence agencies of the western countries.[33] The article also stated that Cuba accused Robert Ménard, the head of RWB, of having links with the CIA.[33] The organization has denied the allegation made by Cuba.[34]

Haiti

The online newsletter CounterPunch criticised RWB's reporting of press freedom in Haiti during and after Jean-Bertrand Aristide's presidency, arguing that it was biased.[35]

Venezuela

Le Monde diplomatique has criticized RWB's attitude towards Hugo Chávez's government in Venezuela, in particular during the 2002 coup attempt.[36] In a right of reply, Robert Ménard declared that RWB had also condemned the support of Venezuela media to the coup attempt.[10]

Philippines

On August 23, 2007, RWB condemned the continuing threats and violence against Philippine radio commentators who report on organized crime and corruption, following a death threat on RGMA Palawan station manager Lily Uy.[37] On December 27, 2007, RSF appealed to Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration to forthwith arrest the killers of radio broadcaster Ferdinand Lintuan, 51, the 5th journalist killed in 2007 in the Philippines. As first president of the Davao Association of Sports Journalists he was murdered in Davao City on December 24.[38]

Gaza Strip

On January 24 RWB condemned "shots that were fired at an Israeli TV reporter and a cameraman on 15 January while in a kibbutz adjoining the border with the Gaza Strip, although they were clearly identifiable as journalists." [2] The television crew that came under attack filmed the incident.[39]

International Online Free Expression Day

Reporters Without Borders launched the first International Online Free Expression Day on March 12, 2008.[40] UNESCO, who initially had granted patronage to that event, withdrew its patronage on March 12 giving as reasons that RWB "published material concerning a number of UNESCO’s Member States, which UNESCO had not been informed of and could not endorse" and that "UNESCO’s logo was placed in such a way as to indicate the Organization’s support of the information presented."[41][42]

Worldwide Press Freedom Index Ranking

Yearly worldwide press freedom ranking of countries
published by Reporters Without Borders
Rank Country Index Notes
2008 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002
1 Flag of Iceland.svg Iceland 1.50 0.75 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50
1 Flag of Luxembourg.svg Luxembourg 1.50            
1 Flag of Norway.svg Norway 1.50 0.75 2.00 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50
4 Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.50 2.00 2.50  
4 Flag of Finland.svg Finland 2.00 1.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50
4 Flag of Ireland.svg Republic of Ireland 2.00 2.00 0.50 0.50 0.50 2.83 1.00
7 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium 3.00 1.50 4.00 4.00 4.00 1.17 3.50
7 Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia 3.00 3.00 2.50 1.00 2.25  
7 Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand 3.00 4.17 5.00 2.00 0.67 2.83  
7 Flag of Slovakia.svg Slovakia 3.00 1.00 2.50 0.75 0.50 2.50  
7 Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden 3.00 1.50 4.00 2.00 2.00 1.50 1.50
7 Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland 3.00 3.00 2.50 0.50 0.50 2.50 4.25
13 Flag of Canada.svg Canada 3.33 4.88 4.50 4.50 3.33 1.83 0.75
14 Flag of Austria.svg Austria 3.50 4.25 4.50 2.50 3.25 2.75 7.50
14 Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark 3.50 2.00 5.00 0.50 0.50 1.00 3.00
16 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Czech Republic 4.00 4.00 0.75 1.00 3.50 2.50 11.25
16 Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania 4.00 7.00 6.50 4.50 3.00 2.83  
16 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands 4.00 3.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50
16 Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal 4.00 2.00 3.00 4.83 4.50 5.17 1.50
20 Flag of Germany.svg Germany 4.50 5.75 5.50 4.00 2.00 1.33 1.50
21 Flag of Jamaica.svg Jamaica 4.88 8.63 5.50 7.50 4.17 3.33  
22 Flag of Costa Rica.svg Costa Rica 5.10 6.50 6.67 8.50 7.63 3.83 4.25
23 Flag of Hungary.svg Hungary 5.50 4.50 3.00 2.00 6.00 3.33 6.50
23 Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia 5.50 8.50 6.00 5.50 10.00 11.00 8.00
23 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom 5.50 8.25 6.50 5.17 6.00 4.25 6.00
26 Flag of Suriname.svg Suriname 6.00            
27 Flag of Trinidad and Tobago.svg Trinidad and Tobago 6.13 5.00 5.00 2.00 2.00 1.00  
28 Flag of Australia.svg Australia 6.25 8.79 9.00 6.50 9.50 9.25 3.50
29 Flag of Japan.svg Japan 6.50 11.75 12.50 8.00 10.00 8.00 7.50
30 Flag of Slovenia.svg Slovenia 7.33 6.50 3.00 1.00 2.25 3.00 4.00
31 Flag of Cyprus.svg Cyprus 7.50 14.00 7.50 5.50 22.00 20.83   pre-2005 data included Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
31 Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana 7.50 9.00 8.50 15.00 13.50 8.75 23.00
31 Flag of Greece.svg Greece 7.50 9.25 8.00 4.00 7.00 6.00 5.00
31 Flag of Mali.svg Mali 7.50 16.50 9.00 8.00 12.83 11.00 12.50
35 Flag of France.svg France 7.67 9.75 9.00 6.25 3.50 4.17 3.25
36 Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Bosnia and Herzegovina 8.00 11.17 5.00 7.00 3.67 6.83 12.50
36 Flag of Cape Verde.svg Cape Verde 8.00 14.00 11.50 6.00 8.75 8.25 13.75
36 Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa 8.00 13.00 11.25 6.50 5.00 3.33 7.50
36 Flag of Spain.svg Spain 8.00 10.25 10.00 8.33 9.00 7.67 7.75
36 Flag of the Republic of China.svg Republic of China (Taiwan) 8.00 10.00 10.50 12.25 14.25 12.00 9.00
36 Flag of the United States.svg United States 8.00 14.50 13.00 9.50 4.00 6.00 4.75
42 Flag of Macedonia.svg Macedonia 8.25 11.50 11.50 8.75 11.25 9.67  
43 Flag of Uruguay.svg Uruguay 8.33 11.75 13.75 9.75 10.00 4.00 6.00
44 Flag of Italy.svg Italy 8.42 11.25 9.90 8.67 9.00 9.75 11.00
45 Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia 8.50 12.50 13.00 12.83 11.83 16.50 8.75
46 Flag of Israel.svg Israel (Israeli territory) 8.83 13.25 12.00 10.00 8.00 8.00 30.00
47 Flag of Mauritius.svg Mauritius 9.00 8.50 8.00 7.50 10.50 7.25 9.50
47 Flag of Poland.svg Poland 9.00 18.50 14.00 12.50 6.83 6.17 7.75
47 Flag of Romania.svg Romania 9.00 12.75 14.00 16.17 17.83 11.50 13.25
47 Flag of South Korea.svg South Korea 9.00 12.13 7.75 7.50 11.13 9.17 10.50
51 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Hong Kong 9.75 20.00 14.00 8.25 7.50 11.00 4.83
51 Flag of Liberia.svg Liberia 9.75 25.33 19.00 20.50 40.00 40.00 37.75
53 Flag of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.svg Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus 10.00 19.00 14.50 12.50 22.00 20.83   pre-2005 data included Cyprus
53 Flag of Montenegro.svg Montenegro 10.00 19.00 11.50 14.83 20.13 21.33 20.75 pre-2007 data from Serbia and Montenegro
53 Flag of Togo.svg Togo 10.00 15.17 15.00 23.75 19.50 27.50 31.50
56 Flag of Chile.svg Chile 11.50 12.13 11.63 11.75 10.00 6.83 6.50
57 Flag of Panama.svg Panama 11.83 17.88 9.50 15.00 14.50 9.75 15.50
58 Flag of Kosovo.svg Kosovo 12.00 19.75 16.00 25.75 20.13 21.33 20.75 pre-2005 data from Serbia and Montenegro
  Flag of Grenada.svg Grenada       12.00    
59 Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria 12.50 16.25 9.00 10.25 8.00 6.50 9.75
59 Flag of Nicaragua.svg Nicaragua 12.50 14.25 15.50 15.25 11.67 6.50  
61 Flag of Kuwait.svg Kuwait 12.63 20.17 17.00 21.25 31.67 31.33 25.50
62 Flag of El Salvador.svg El Salvador 12.80 20.20 10.00 5.75 6.00 6.83 8.75
63 Flag of Burkina Faso.svg Burkina Faso 13.00 21.50 16.00 19.00 16.25 18.00 27.75
64 Flag of Serbia.svg Serbia 13.50 21.00 11.50 14.83 20.13 21.33 20.75 pre-2007 data from Serbia and Montenegro
65 Flag of East Timor.svg Timor-Leste 13.75 27.00 18.50 13.50 13.50 5.50  
66 Flag of Botswana.svg Botswana 14.00 23.50 13.00 14.00 11.50 13.00  
66 Flag of Lebanon.svg Lebanon 14.00 28.75 27.00 28.25 24.38 32.50 19.67
68 Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina 14.08 24.83 17.30 13.67 21.33 15.17 12.00
69 Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg United Arab Emirates 14.50 20.25 17.50 25.75 50.25 37.00  
70 Flag of Benin.svg Benin 15.00 17.00 5.50 5.50 5.50 5.25 6.00
70 Flag of Malawi.svg Malawi 15.00 26.75 25.50 22.75 31.00 21.00 27.67
70 Flag of Tanzania.svg Tanzania 15.00 18.00 19.82 17.50 14.50 16.50 21.25
73 Flag of Haiti.svg Haiti 15.13 23.50 19.50 33.50 42.13 31.00 36.50
74 Flag of Bhutan.svg Bhutan 15.50 37.17 25.00 51.50 55.83 77.33 90.75
74 Flag of Ecuador.svg Ecuador 15.50 18.50 15.25 21.75 16.50 7.67 5.50
74 Flag of Qatar.svg Qatar 15.50 24.00 18.00 23.00 32.50 35.00  
74 Flag of the Seychelles.svg Seychelles 15.50 33.00 24.50 17.00 23.50 26.75 20.75
74 Flag of Zambia.svg Zambia 15.50 21.50 22.50 23.00 29.75 23.25 26.75
79 Flag of Albania.svg Albania 16.00 25.50 18.00 14.17 11.50 6.50  
79 Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji 16.00 33.50 14.00 14.00 16.00 11.50  
81 Flag of Guinea-Bissau.svg Guinea-Bissau 16.33 33.50 14.50 17.00 23.50 35.25 30.25
82 Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil 18.00 25.25 17.17 14.50 16.50 16.75 18.75
82 Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg Dominican Republic 18.00 22.75 12.75 12.25 6.75 17.00  
82 Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga 18.00 38.25 13.00 14.50 38.17    
85 Flag of the Central African Republic.svg Central African Republic 18.50 22.50 14.50 19.75 32.50 32.75 21.50
86 Flag of Senegal.svg Senegal 19.00 25.00 17.50 19.00 21.50 14.50 14.00
87 Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine 19.25 26.75 26.50 32.50 51.00 40.00 40.00
88 Flag of Guyana.svg Guyana 19.75            
89 Flag of the Comoros.svg Comoros 20.00 28.00 22.50 22.00 26.50 18.50 20.50
90 Flag of Mozambique.svg Mozambique 20.50 23.00 11.50 10.50 16.25 14.00 23.50
90 Flag of Paraguay.svg Paraguay 20.50 26.10 18.25 15.50 10.50 7.17 8.50
92 Flag of the Republic of the Congo.svg Republic of the Congo 20.75 24.50 17.00 17.00 17.50 14.00 23.17
93 Flag of Mongolia.svg Mongolia 20.83 23.40 19.25 12.50 19.00 18.25 24.50
94 Flag of Burundi Burundi 21.00 43.40 39.83        
94 Flag of Madagascar.svg Madagascar 21.00 20.00 15.00 24.50 18.50 8.17 22.75
96 Flag of Bahrain.svg Bahrain 21.17 38.00 28.00 38.75 52.50 35.17 23.00
97 Flag of Kenya.svg Kenya 21.25 23.75 30.25 30.00 22.25 18.50 24.75
98 Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova 21.38 24.75 19.17 17.50 20.50 27.00  
99 Flag of Guinea.svg Guinea 21.50 33.50 27.50 26.00 24.50 33.17 26.00
99 Flag of Honduras.svg Honduras 21.50 25.50 14.50 18.00 11.75 14.17  
101 Flag of Guatemala.svg Guatemala 22.64 33.00 21.25 21.50 16.50 30.83 27.25
102 Flag of Armenia.svg Armenia 22.75 23.63 25.50 26.00 23.50 25.17  
102 Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey 22.75 31.25 25.00 25.00 37.25 35.00 33.50
104 Flag of Maldives.svg Maldives 23.25 45.17 51.25 58.50 69.17 47.50  
105 Flag of Mauritania.svg Mauritania 23.88 15.50 17.50 40.00 51.00 36.67 41.33
106 Flag of Tajikistan.svg Tajikistan 25.50 37.00 30.00 33.00 27.75 34.50 28.25
107 Flag of Uganda.svg Uganda 26.00 28.00 29.83 19.25 24.00 25.75 17.00
108 Flag of Peru.svg Peru 26.25 37.38 28.25 33.33 40.00 10.25 9.50
109 Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg Côte d'Ivoire 26.50 27.00 25.00 52.25 60.38 42.17 19.00
110 Flag of Gabon.svg Gabon 26.75 31.50 28.50 26.00 37.50 31.25 20.50
111 Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia 27.00 30.50 26.00 26.00 37.75 34.25 20.00
111 Flag of Kyrgyzstan.svg Kyrgyzstan 27.00 33.60 34.00 32.00 35.25 32.00 31.75
113 Flag of Venezuela.svg Venezuela 27.33 36.88 29.00 23.00 24.63 27.83 25.00
114 Flag of Sierra Leone.svg Sierra Leone 27.75 39.50 26.00 39.50 24.50 23.50 24.50
115 Flag of Bolivia.svg Bolivia 28.20 21.50 4.50 9.67 20.00 9.67 14.50
116 Flag of Angola.svg Angola 29.50 26.50 21.50 18.00 26.50 28.00 30.17
116 Flag of Lesotho.svg Lesotho 29.50 29.50 16.00 19.50 29.50 17.75  
118 Flag of India.svg India 30.00 39.33 26.50 27.00 38.50 39.00 26.50
119 Flag of the United States.svg United States (extra-territorial) 31.00 36.00 31.50 48.50 36.00 41.00  
120 Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia 31.25 20.83 21.00 25.17 27.50 17.33  
121 Flag of Algeria.svg Algeria 31.33 40.50 40.00 40.33 43.50 33.00 31.00
122 Flag of Morocco.svg Morocco 32.25 33.25 24.83 36.17 43.00 39.67 29.00
123 Flag of Oman.svg Oman 32.67         57.75  
124 Flag of Thailand.svg Thailand 34.50 53.50 33.50 28.00 14.00 19.67 22.75
125 Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Kazakhstan 35.33 41.63 41.00 36.17 44.17 42.50 42.00
126 Flag of Cambodia.svg Cambodia 35.50 25.33 27.25 23.00 36.50 19.50 24.25
126 Flag of Colombia.svg Colombia 35.50 42.33 44.75 40.17 47.38 49.17 40.83
128 Flag of Jordan.svg Jordan 36.00 40.21 27.50 24.00 39.13 37.00 33.50
129 Flag of Cameroon.svg Cameroon 36.90 36.00 28.25 20.50 27.00 30.50 28.83
130 Flag of Niger.svg Niger 37.00 25.50 24.50 13.00 18.33 15.75 18.50
131 Flag of Nigeria.svg Nigeria 37.75 49.83 32.23 38.75 37.75 31.50 15.50
  Flag of Brunei.svg Brunei           38.00
132 Flag of Malaysia.svg Malaysia 39.50 41.00 22.25 33.00 39.83 32.00 37.83
133 Flag of Chad.svg Chad 41.25 36.50 35.50 30.00 33.25 24.00 28.75
134 Flag of Djibouti.svg Djibouti 41.50 50.25 33.00 37.00 55.00 35.50 31.25
135 Flag of Sudan.svg Sudan 42.00 55.75 48.13 44.00 44.25 45.75 36.00
136 Flag of Bangladesh.svg Bangladesh 42.70 53.17 48.00 61.25 62.50 46.50 43.75
137 Flag of The Gambia.svg Gambia 42.75 48.25 54.00 41.00 29.50 18.25 22.50
138 Flag of Nepal Nepal 43.25 53.75 73.50 86.75 84.00 51.50 63.00
139 Flag of the Philippines.svg Philippines 45.00 44.75 51.00 50.00 36.63 35.25 29.00
140 Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico 46.13 53.63 45.83 45.50 27.83 17.67 24.75
141 Flag of Russia.svg Russia 47.50 56.90 52.50 48.67 51.38 49.50 48.00
142 Flag of Ethiopia.svg Ethiopia 47.75 63.00 75.00 42.00 37.00 37.50 37.50
143 Flag of Tunisia.svg Tunisia 48.10 57.00 53.75 57.50 62.67 50.83 67.75
144 Flag of Singapore.svg Singapore 49.00 56.00 51.50 50.67 57.00 47.33  
145 Flag of Rwanda.svg Rwanda 50.00 58.88 41.00 38.00 37.25 34.25 37.50
146 Flag of Egypt.svg Egypt 50.25 58.00 46.25 52.00 43.50 34.25 34.50
147 Flag of Swaziland.svg Swaziland 50.50 54.50 40.50 35.00 31.00 37.50 29.00
148 Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.svg Democratic Republic of the Congo 51.25 50.50 51.00 57.33 51.50 38.50 40.75
149 Flag of Israel.svg Israel (extra-territorial) 51.50 32.00 47.00   37.50 49.00  
150 Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan 53.63 55.40 47.00 51.00 49.67 34.50 34.50
151 Flag of Zimbabwe.svg Zimbabwe 54.00 62.00 50.00 64.25 67.50 45.50 48.25
152 Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan 54.88 64.83 70.33 60.75 61.75 39.00 44.67
153 Flag of Somalia.svg Somalia 58.00 71.50 51.25 59.00 43.50 45.00  
154 Flag of Belarus.svg Belarus 58.33 63.63 57.00 61.33 54.10 52.00 52.17
155 Flag of Yemen.svg Yemen 59.00 56.67 54.00 46.25 48.00 41.83 34.75
156 Flag of Afghanistan.svg Afghanistan 59.25 56.50 44.25 39.17 28.25 40.17 35.50
156 Flag of Equatorial Guinea.svg Equatorial Guinea 59.25 65.25 48.00 44.00 46.25 44.75 42.75
158 Flag of Iraq.svg Iraq 59.38 67.83 66.83 67.00 58.50 37.50 79.00
159 Flag of Syria.svg Syria 59.63 66.00 63.00 55.00 67.50 67.50 62.83
160 Flag of Libya.svg Libya 61.50 66.50 62.50 88.75 65.00 60.00 72.50
161 Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia 61.75 59.75 76.00 66.00 79.17 71.50 62.50
162 Flag of Uzbekistan.svg Uzbekistan 62.70 74.88 71.00 66.50 52.13 61.50 45.00
163 Flag of Palestine.svg Palestinian Authority 66.88 69.83 46.75 42.50 43.17 39.25 27.00
164 Flag of Laos.svg Laos 70.00 75.00 67.50 66.50 64.33 94.83 89.00
165 Flag of Sri Lanka.svg Sri Lanka 78.00 67.50 50.75 33.25 36.50 24.83 15.75
166 Flag of Iran.svg Iran 80.33 96.50 90.88 89.17 78.30 89.33 48.25
167 Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg People's Republic of China (mainland only) 85.50 89.00 94.00 83.00 92.33 91.25 97.00
168 Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam 86.17 79.25 67.25 73.25 86.88 89.17 81.25
169 Flag of Cuba.svg Cuba 88.33 96.17 95.00 87.00 106.83 97.83 90.25
170 Flag of Myanmar.svg Myanmar 94.38 93.75 94.75 88.83 103.63 95.50 96.83
171 Flag of Turkmenistan.svg Turkmenistan 95.50 103.75 98.50 93.50 99.83 82.83 91.50
172 Flag of North Korea.svg North Korea 96.50 108.75 109.00 109.00 107.50 99.50 97.50
173 Flag of Eritrea.svg Eritrea 97.50 114.75 97.50 99.75 93.25 91.50 83.67

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Reporters sans frontières, RFO, 6 November 2006 (French)
  2. European Parliament. Ladies, Ibrahim and Reporters joint Sakharov prize winners
  3. Reporters sans frontières - Handbook for bloggers and cyber-dissidents
  4. Reporters Without Borders. How the index was compiled
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Marie-Christine Tabet, Révélations sur le financement de RSF, Le Figaro, 21 April 2008 (French)
  6. reporters sans frontières : liberté de la presse, contre la censure, information libre, défense des libertés
  7. Atteintes à la liberté de la presse en Algérie, El Watan, 11 June 2005 (French)
  8. Income and expenditure
  9. Z Magazine. The Reporters Without Borders Fraud
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Daniel Junqua, Reporters sans frontières, Le Monde diplomatique, August 2007 (French)
  11. http://www.rsf-chinese.org/spip.php?article59 rsf-chinese about page, paragraph 14
  12. http://www.tfd.org.tw/english/about.php?id=en0101 TFD about page, paragraph 3
  13. Jean-Noël Darde, Quand Robert Ménard, de RSF, légitime la torture, Rue 89, 26 August 2007 (French)
  14. [1] Reporters without Borders, follows in Washington’s steps and legitimizes torture, Global Research, September 21, 2007
  15. Reporters Without Borders Unmasked, Counterpunch, 17 May 2005
  16. The Return of Otto Reich, FAIR, 8 June 2001
  17. Friends of Terrorism, The Guardian, 8 February 2002
  18. The Case for closing the School of the Americas, Bill Quigley, Brigham Young University, 2005
  19. Teaching Torture, LA Weekly, 22 July 2004
  20. Amnesty International USA's Executive Director Dr. William F. Schulz on “Ask Amnesty”, Amnesty International USA
  21. School of the Americas Watch
  22. 22.0 22.1 Otto Reich About to Slip into State Department Post Via Recess Appointment, Council on Hemispheric Affairs, 7 January 2002
  23. Bush Envoy Puts Latin Post, and a Stormy Past, Behind Him, New York Times, 17 June 2004
  24. Spinwatch - Reporters Without Borders Unmasked
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 Reporters Without Borders ordered to pay 6,000 euros to Korda’s heir over use of Che photo, RSF, March 10 2004
  26. CounterPunch Reporters Without Borders Unmasked
  27. Reporters Without BordersIncome and expenditure
  28. "RSF y la foto del "Che"" (in Spanish), BBC (2004-03-11). 
  29. Pedro de La Hoz, Ménard trasquilado - Tribunal francés prohíbe utilización espuria de imagen del Che en campaña mediática anticubana, Granma, 11 July 2003 (Spanish)
  30. 30.0 30.1 Quand Castro disparaîtra, France 5 (French)
  31. Reporters sans frontières (2) - mobiliser médias et opinion, presentation of RWB by its delegate in Alsace, Corinne Cumerlato (French)
  32. Reporters Without Borders suspended for one year from UN commission on human rights, Reporters Without Borders, 24 July 2003 (English) (URL accessed on 9 August 2007)
  33. 33.0 33.1 Trouble in Tibet Frontline Volume 25 - Issue 07 Mar. 29-Apr. 11, 2008
  34. Why we take so much interest in Cuba
  35. CounterPunch. Reporters Without Borders and Washington's Coups
  36. Maurice Lemoine, Coups d’Etat sans frontières, Le Monde diplomatique, August 2002 (French) (Portuguese translation)
  37. GMA NEWS.TV, Int'l groups slam attacks against broadcasters
  38. Abs-Cbn Interactive, RWB calls for immediate arrest of Lintuan killers
  39. YouTube - Palestinians Shoot At News Crew
  40. Reporters Without Borders - Launch of Online Free Expression Day
  41. UNESCO Statement on the withdrawal of patronage of the International day for freedom of expression on the internet
  42. UNESCO withdraw patronage to Reporters Without Border

See also

External links