Online media fuelling divisions, global tensions: Media watchdog

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LONDON • Unregulated online content has spread disinformation and propaganda that have amplified political divisions worldwide, fanned international tensions and even contributed to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a media watchdog warned yesterday.
Reporters Without Borders said democratic societies are increasingly fractured by social media spreading disinformation and more opinion media pursuing a so-called "Fox News model", referring to the controversial US right-wing television network.
At the same time, despotic and autocratic regimes that tightly control information in their societies are using their "asymmetric" position to wage "propaganda wars" against democracies and fuel divisions within them, the watchdog said in this year's edition of its annual World Press Freedom Index.
"Polarisation on these two levels is fuelling increased tension," Reporters Without Borders, widely known by its French acronym RSF, said in a five-page summary.
It noted that Russia - where the state-run media dominates and independent outlets are increasingly stifled - invaded Ukraine following a propaganda war.
"The creation of media weaponry in authoritarian countries eliminates their citizens' right to information but is also linked to the rise in international tension, which can lead to the worst kind of wars," RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire said.
He said the "Fox News-isation" of Western media poses a "fatal danger for democracies because it undermines the basis of civil harmony and tolerant public debate".
Mr Deloire urged countries to adopt appropriate legal frameworks to protect democratic online information spaces.
The situation is "very bad" in a record 28 countries, according to this year's ranking of 180 countries and regions based on the degree of freedom enjoyed by journalists.
The lowest-ranked were North Korea (180th), Eritrea (179th) and Iran (178th), with Myanmar (176th) and China (175th) close behind.
Russia (155th) and ally Belarus (153rd) were also on RSF's red list of the most repressive. Singapore was ranked 139th.
Hong Kong's position plummeted dozens of places to 148th, reflecting Beijing's efforts to use "its legislative arsenal to confine its population and cut it off from the rest of the world", RSF said.
Nordic countries Norway, Denmark and Sweden again topped the index, serving as democratic models "where freedom of expression flourishes".
RSF commended Moldova (40th) and Bulgaria (91st), owing to government changes and "the hope it has brought for improvement in the situation for journalists". But it noted that "oligarchs still own or control the media" in both countries.
Media polarisation was "feeding and reinforcing internal social divisions in democratic societies" such as the United States (42nd).
That trend was more stark in "illiberal democracies" like Poland (66th), a European Union country where suppression of independent media was also noted by RSF.
The non-governmental organisation, launched in 1985 and which has published the yearly index since 2002, has become a thorn in the side of autocratic and despotic regimes around the world.
This year's listing was developed with a new methodology redefining press freedom and using five new indicators - political context, legal framework, economic context, sociocultural context, and security - to reflect its "complexity".
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
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