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30 Year High for Journalists Killed

By: Aubrey Moulton

Apparently a career in journalism has recently been reassessed as a life threatening profession. The U.N. claims at least 71 journalist's lives were taken around the globe in 2009. Last year there were a whole lot of things happening economically and politically and strife was rampant. Therefore, journalists were in risky locales and more were killed in 2009 than in the past 30 years that people have been tracking this trend.
Nearly 30 of 2009's death toll occurred in one massacre in an election-related ambush in the Philippines last November. This was the worst known incident for journalists. But the worry did not end there. Last year alone in the People's Republic of China 24 journalists were imprisoned and Iran was not far behind with twenty three. The number of those in jail has now increased to forty seven in Iran. They continue to quiet bloggers and other internet users.
The tally the world over was 136 reporters jailed by the close of 2009, states Robert Mahoney the director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. It seems that things are only becoming more fatal in both the Far East and the Middle East.
Governments are trying to crack down on their critics. They attempt to do this by hacking into and sabotaging online news sites. This occurred in Tunisia when they targeted an online news site, Kalima. Iran has also tried to quiet opponents via a government crackdown. And they are also breaking into social networks in order to try and ascertain identities of both critcs and followers.
Of the seventy one total deaths in 2009, fifty one were murders and the other twenty four deaths continue to be under investigation. Before 2009, the highest amount of deaths per year was 67 and that was back in 2007. While this may be precarious, don’t be turned away, there are myriad perks that accompany the position. They get to circle the world and then report and write about exciting topics.
What better place for controversy and conflict than gathering the news?. That means journalists may to be with the military on the mountainside in Afghanistan, tracking along with Iranian protesters, and in China reporting about the pollution and lack of freedom in the press, or in Haiti after the earthquake, and next gathering data on the spread of the swine flu.
The job can be dangerous. Just look at the two journalists who were imprisoned when they stepped over the border into North Korea. No one knew how long it would take to get them released but eventually it happened.
Because of the imprisonment and slayings of journalists, Mahoney wants to have the U.N. be in the forefront and be more on the offense in regard to freedom of expression. Ultimately sovereignty lies with each country and they can almost do anything they want. Some would call that freedom?

Article Source: http://www.articlecontentprovider.com/articlesubmit

Apparently a career in journalism has been reassigned as a dangerous profession. The U.N. claims no less than 71 journalists were killed across the globe in 2009. Last year there were a whole lot of things happening economically and politically and clashes were common. So journalists were in unsafe positions and more were killed in 2009 than in the past thirty years that people have been following this growing trend.

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