Well, Latvia got what it
was “working” for – a drop of 20 places to 50th
place in the world in the Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom
Index. It was in “good” company, just three places behind the
47th place United States, which has disgraced its own
benchmark First Amendment press freedom protections by arresting
journalists covering the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations in several
cities.
Latvia earned its sharp
drop, according to Reporters Without Borders, for two incidents this
year – a raid by anti-corruption police on the newspaper Neatkarīgā
Rīta Avīze (NRA) and the
detention, for 48 hours, of the editor of a website in Latvian which
exposed what it claimed was suspcious e-mail correspondence between
Riga mayor Nils Ušakovs and the Russian Embassy.
Unfortunately,
I missed the NRA incident
in this blog, or perhaps I thought that an investigation by the
anti-corruption police (KNAB) was justified, since the newspaper is
effectively controlled by Ventspils mayor, oligarch and accused
money-laundered and economic criminal Aivars Lembergs. I may have
been wrong.
In
any event, if you scroll back through what I have posted during 2011,
there is plenty of reason to consider the freedom of expression (not
just the rights of journalists) to have been dragged down to the
level of a black humor banana republic by several actions of the
authorities. So this ranking is well deserved, though I am more
worried about the decline of press freedom in the country where I
grew up – the United States. I frequently refer to the clear
language of the First Amendment: “Congress shall make no law...”.
That, for me, sets the standard for freedom of the press and speech,
and it is very disturbing that the US cannot live up to its own
standards. What can one expect of Latvia.
Nonetheless,
respecting the rights of journalists and the freedom of expression is
a low cost enterprise. Just let them be. And it has been proven
possible in a country with much the same historical experience and
“post-Soviet” political culture as Latvia – it's neighbor to
the north, Estonia, ranked number three in the press freedom index
after Finland and Norway. Another lesson not learned by a country
that seems to want a
downward spiral into cheap-ass (no concentration camps, just petty
and stupid repression) banana republic status.
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