Record Number of Journalists Imprisoned in 2020, the Most in China

Record Number of Journalists Imprisoned in 2020, the Most in China
Journalists gather at a media center in Beijing, on May 20, 2020. (Thomas Peter - Pool/Getty Images)
Reuters
12/16/2020
Updated:
12/16/2020
A record number of journalists were imprisoned during 2020, as governments cracked down on coverage of the coronavirus pandemic or tried to suppress reporting of civil unrest, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said on Dec. 15.
China was the world’s worst jailer for journalists for the second year in a row. Many of the 47 journalists currently imprisoned in China are “serving long sentences or are jailed in the Xinjiang region without any charge disclosed,” a CPJ report stated. 
At least 274 journalists were in jail as of Dec. 1, the most since the New York-based group began collecting data in the early 1990s, the report said, up from at least 250 last year.
Protests and political tensions were the cause of many arrests, with the most made in China, Turkey, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, it said.
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, authoritarian leaders tried to control reporting by arresting journalists. At least two journalists died after contracting the disease in custody, the report said.
“It’s shocking and appalling that we are seeing a record number of journalists imprisoned in the midst of a global pandemic,” CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon said in a statement.
While no journalists were in prison in the United States as of Dec. 1, 110 were arrested or charged in 2020, many while covering demonstrations against police violence, the CPJ said.
Countries where the number of jailed journalists rose significantly include Belarus, where the re-election of its long-time president sparked mass protests, and Ethiopia, where political unrest has led to armed conflict.
The report found that two-thirds of journalists in jail were charged with anti-state crimes such as terrorism or membership of banned groups, while no charges were disclosed in nearly 20 percent of cases.
By Richard Pullin. The Epoch Times contributed to this report.