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Iraq most dangerous country for journalists: IPI

VIENNA | Wed Apr 25, 2007 11:01am EDT

VIENNA (Reuters) - Iraq remains the most dangerous country for journalists with 46 killed last year in bombings, abductions and drive-by shootings, twice as many as in 2005, the International Press Institute (IPI) said on Wednesday.

The violence-torn country topped the organization's annual survey of journalists' killings, which totaled 100 worldwide last year, making it the worst year since IPI started recording them in 1997, Vienna-based IPI said in a statement.

"Journalists and media workers have emerged as a clear target for insurgent attacks," IPI said in the survey.

"Media representatives have been repeatedly victimized by sectarian death squads intent on silencing outspoken voices through violence and intimidation," it added.

Of the 46 journalists killed, 44 were Iraqi nationals, several of them working for international media outlets, it said.

The total was largest of any year since U.S.-led troops toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

The organization, which was founded in the United States in 1950 and has members in 120 countries, blamed the Iraqi government for not prosecuting journalists' killings and for tightening its own grip on the media at the same time.

"Journalists have faced threats, criminal prosecution and imprisonment and news organizations have been banned over coverage that displeases the authorities," IPI said.

"The Iraqi government's policies towards the press closely resemble those of autocratic regimes in the region, and not those of an aspiring democracy."

Ten journalists were killed in the Philippines and seven in Mexico, IPI said.

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