Africa in 2018 World Press Freedom Index: Ghana best, Eritrea worst
The West African nation of Ghana has the continent’s best atmosphere for media personnel, a report by the Reporters without Borders (RSF) has said.
The 2018 World Press
Freedom Index published on Wednesday showed that Ghana dethroned Namibia who
were tops in 2017. Ghana placed 23rd on the 180 country list, sandwiched
between Samoa and Latvia on 22nd and 24th respectively.

Completing the top three slots for Africa were Namibia in 26th and South Africa in 28th slot. At the bottom of the ranking was Eritrea at 179th, Africa’s worst placement. Others in the not free bracket were Sudan, Egypt, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea, Djibouti and Somalia.

Completing the top three slots for Africa were Namibia in 26th and South Africa in 28th slot. At the bottom of the ranking was Eritrea at 179th, Africa’s worst placement. Others in the not free bracket were Sudan, Egypt, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea, Djibouti and Somalia.
The ranking published
annually by RSF since
2002, the World Press Freedom Index measures the level of media freedom in 180
countries, including the level of pluralism, media independence, and respect
for the safety and freedom of journalists.
The 2018 Index takes
account of violations that took place between January 1st and December 31st
2017.
Media pluralism but not enough
independence – RSFreport on Ghana
General elections were
held in December 2016 without major incidents or media freedom violations.
Ghana is regarded as one of the most democratic countries in Africa and Chapter
12 of its 1992 constitution guarantees media pluralism and independence.
But only a very small
number of media outlets provide good news coverage. A third of the media are
owned by the state or by businessmen linked to the government.
The lack of
transparency that characterizes the media industry is compounded by a flawed
regulatory system that tends to limit the freedom to inform. Thanks to
extensive use of mobile phones, a great deal of news and information circulates
online.
Criminal code
provisions penalizing “false news” are sometimes abused in order to harass
journalists. But journalists are rarely arrested or imprisoned.
A dictatorship in which the media have
no rights RSF report on Eritrea
For the past 26 years,
Eritrea has been a dictatorship in which there is no room for freely reported
news and information. At least 11 journalists are currently detained without
being charged or tried.
Like everything else
in Eritrea, the media are totally subject to the whim of President Issayas
Afeworki, a predator of press freedom who is responsible for “crimes against
humanity,” according to a June 2016 UN report. He has no plans to relax his
grip.
“Those who think there
will be democracy in this country can think so in another world,” he said in
2014.
The only independent
and politically non-partisan radio station providing Eritreans with freely
reported news and information is Radio Erena. It is run by Eritrean exile
journalists based in Paris, but its signal is often jammed in Eritrea.
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