Colombia remains one of the most dangerous countries in the world to practise journalism, according to the Freedom of the Press Foundation’s (FLIP) 2012 report.
158 attacks against journalists were registered last year with t
“[2012] was a year that saw a striking increase in threats against journalists across the whole country,” the President of FLIP, Ignacio Gomez, told Colombia Reports.
The president criticized the way the threats are currently being dealt with in Colombia.
“There are 90 protected journalists in the country and we consider these schemes a useless expense, precisely because they are not investigating the origin of these threats and if they are not investigated, they are not resolved. The scheme is put in place today and will continue for the next 15 years because the investigating authorities have not clarified who wants to kill the person,” explained the president.
There were also 29 cases of physical or psychological abuse with a further three journalists injured while covering news. The registered attacks also include one homicide, two kidnappings and nine illegal arrests. There were 24 cases of obstructing a journalist’s work and two cases of hacking. Six people were forcibly displaced, with one person driven to exile and one attempt was made to destroy infrastructure.
The report showed where the attacks took place according to department. Bogota had the highest number of incidents in 2012, with 17, which the report attributes to the fact that Colombia’s capital has more journalists and any other region.
The departments of Antioquia and Atlantico registered 15 attacks each and at the other end of the scale, Meta had just one incident and Casanare and Putumayo only two.
The report also published the results of the Freedom of Expression and Access to Information Index, conducted by the Antonio Narino Project (PAN). 603 journalists were surveyed as part of the project, which launched in 2012, and Colombia was ranked “intermediate” according to the criteria with 50 points out of a possible 100.
Impunity was the most worrying issue and scored only 12 out of 100 points.
Although the government already provides certain means of protection, Gomez believes that the measures must change in the future to become more effective.
“The government provides 90 protection systems and we are asking for them to change the system so that as well as protecting journalists, it will seek to formally investigate the origin of the threats, so they they can be avoided and important costs can be saved,” asserted the president.
Sources
- De las balas de los expedientes: Informe sobre el estado de la libertad de prensa en Colombia, 2012
- Getting Away With Murder
- Interview with Ignacio Gomez, President of FLIP