By Peter Greste
Israel has emerged as one of the world’s leading jailers of journalists, according to a newly released census compiled by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
Each year, the committee releases a snapshot of the number of journalists behind bars as of December 1 2023 was the second highest on record with 320 in detention around the world.
In a small way, that is encouraging news. The figure is down from a high of 363 the previous year.
But a troublingly large number remain locked up, undermining press freedom and often, human rights.
China takes out unenviable top spot
At the top of the list sits China with 44 in detention, followed by Myanmar (43), Belarus (28), Russia (22), and Vietnam (19). Israel and Iran share sixth place with 17 each.
While the dip in numbers is positive, the statistics expose a few troubling trends.
As well as a straight count, the Committee to Protect Journalists examines the charges the journalists are facing. The advocacy group found that globally, almost two-thirds are behind bars on what they broadly describe as “anti-state charges” – things such as espionage, terrorism, false news and so on.
In other words, governments have come to regard journalism as some sort of existential threat that has to be dealt with using national security legislation.
In some cases, that may be justified. It is impossible to independently assess the legitimacy of each case, but it does point to the way governments increasingly regard information and the media as a part of the battlefield. That places journalists in the dangerous position of sometimes being unwitting combatants in often brutally violent struggles.
China’s top spot is hardly surprising. It has been there – or close to it – for some years. Censorship makes it extremely difficult to make an accurate assessment of the numbers behind bars, but since the crackdown on pro-democracy activists in 2021, journalists from Hong Kong have, for the first time, found themselves locked up. And almost half of China’s total are Uyghurs from Xinjiang, where Beijing has been accused of human rights abuses in its ongoing repression of the region’s mostly Muslim ethnic minorities.
The rest of the top four are also familiar, but the two biggest movements are unexpected.
Iran had been the 2022 gold medallist with 62 journalists imprisoned. In the latest census, it dropped to sixth place with just 17. And Israel, which previously had only one behind bars, has climbed to share that place.
That is positive news for Iranian journalists, but awkward for Israel, which repeatedly argues it is the only democracy in the Middle East and the only one that respects media freedom. It also routinely points to Iran for its long-running assault on critics of the regime.
The journalists Israel had detained were all from the occupied West Bank, all Palestinian, and all arrested after Hamas’s horrific attacks from Gaza on October 7. But we know very little about why they were detained. The journalists’ relatives told the committee that most are under what Israel describes as “administrative detention”.
17 arrests in Israel in less than 2 months
The benign term “administrative detention” in fact means the journalists have been incarcerated indefinitely, without trial or charge.
It is possible that they were somehow planning attacks or involved with extremism (Israel uses administrative detention to stop people they accuse of planning to commit a future offence) but the evidence used to justify the detention is not disclosed. We don’t even know why they were arrested.
Israel’s place near the top of the Committee to Protect Journalists’ list exposes a difficult paradox. Media freedom is an intrinsic part of a free democracy. A vibrant, awkward and sometimes snarly media is a proven way to keep public debate alive and the political system healthy.
It is often uncomfortable, but you can’t have a strong democratic system without journalists freely and vigorously fulfilling their watchdog role. In fact, a good way to tell if a democracy is sliding is the extent of a government’s crackdown on the media.
This is not to suggest equivalence between Israel and Iran. Israel remains a democracy, and Israeli media is often savagely critical of its government in ways that would be unthinkable in Tehran.
But if Israel wants to restore confidence in its commitment to democratic norms, at the very least it will need to be transparent about the reasons for arresting 17 journalists in less than two months, and the evidence against them. And if there is no evidence they pose a genuine threat to Israeli security, they must be released immediately.
Peter Greste is Professor of Journalism and Communications at Macquarie University
The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
Samuel L. Bronkowitz says
War crimes too
Kennan says
Benjamin Netanyahu is an unjust and radical leader. this extremely soft handed approach to Israel, and the way they were approaching the situation in Gaza is old, tired, and frankly embarrassing. Over 300 journalist detained? Let’s just say it. They are imprisoned. Soft language. All to play cover for a government, that is using the events of October 7 as an excuse to murder everyone. I’ve said this more times than I want to count. Amaris is a terrorist organization, and terrorism is a tactic. This is not a war. It never was. It was horrific what Hamas did, but it pales in comparison, to what an organized government bought, and paid for by the United States is doing to civilians. In war, there is collateral damage. Again. This is not a war. Israel knows this, so they imprisoned journalists to keep the narrative under control. They know it is much harder to sell a lie then the truth. Quite a few journalists have been killed as well as in present, in fact, more have been killed in the three months of the conflict than any war I can remember.
I know who Netanyahu is. The world knows who Netanyahu is, so none of this surprises me, what does surprise me and upset me, is the fact that Biden and his administration is idly sitting back and aiding and abetting a war criminal like Benjamin Netanyahu. That’s shameful. Everybody is so frightened of Israel and the holocaust card they use to justify what is unjustifiable. Shameful.
DaleL says
A senior Hamas spokesperson, Khaled Mashaal in a Kuwaiti podcast, dismissed any two state solution and rejected recognition of Israel. He express no remorse for the thousands of deaths and the destruction in Gaza that have resulted as a response to the October 7 genocidal terrorist attack. Hamas has rejected ceasefire proposals or the release of kidnapped hostages. Mashaal is a billionaire who lives in Qatar.
In contrast, Netanyahu is at least elected and lives in Israel.
The Gaza problem should not be just Israel’s to solve. Arab states and the U.N. need to step up. A multinational force should replace the IDF and restore order. Hamas is a genocidal terrorist organization and needs to be eliminated.
Pogo says
@Thank you — truly.
The truth is what it is. And President Biden has the weight of the entire world on his back — while people who would be doomed by the return of Trump pester Mr. Biden while the flames of hell lick at mankind’s feet.
Shit.
Sherry says
While the country of Israel, and it’s majority of citizens, may be a democracy, Netanyahu seems to be an extreme right winged, corrupt fascist. . . sound familiar?. . . think desantis and trump.
I am a Democrat, but I agree that the Biden administration is too soft on Netanyahu. In my option, we should cut off ALL aid of any kind, unless and until the Israeli government changes it’s hard line stance against a two state solution. Certainly, the Palestinian people should have their own “homeland”, just as the Israeli people do.
ASF says
Maybe you should examine the resumes and records (and look more closely at the actions and the consequences of those actions) of Netanyahu’s Far left opponents. You might be surprised at what you find out.
The Israelis might point out some of the same about leaders (including on the Left) in other nations–including the United States. And a close examination of the leadership of Israel’s declared enemies could turn anybody’s stomach.
But, hey, we realize that “differentially applied standards” (which often define prejudice) are part and parcel of what Israel deals with all the time, in a global sense.
Sherry says
Suppressing the truth by jailing journalists is certainly part of the fascist playbook! Just look at that list. . . Israel is in terrible company!