What's new

India behind Pakistan, Bangladesh on World Press Freedom Index

emranabbas

Test Debutant
Joined
Oct 29, 2013
Runs
14,955
NEW YORK (TIP): India fell to 157th rank in 180 countries, even as Palestine stood at 156th, one spot ahead, according to Reporters Without Borders’ (RSF) World Press Freedom Index 2026, released on Thursday. Last year, India was marginally ahead when it was ranked at 151 and Palestine was at 163.

Incidentally, India is not only behind Palestine, but also behind Tajikistan (155), Laos (154), Pakistan (153), Bangladesh (152) and Cambodia (151). It ranks above only 23 countries, the last being Eritrea.

The decline is visible across all five indicators, which the RSF tracks — economic, legal, security, political and social environment for journalism. It is the legal indicator that has suffered the sharpest collapse this year, deteriorating in more than 60 per cent of the countries — 110 out of 180 — between 2025 and 2026.

India is explicitly named among those where legal conditions for journalism have worsened most severely.

Meanwhile, the RSF itself has described this year’s index as the bleakest since it started publishing 25 years ago. More than half the world’s countries fall under the “difficult” or “very serious” categories for press freedom.

Norway continues to retain the top spot for the 10th consecutive year. Eritrea has held the last spot for the third consecutive year, while the United States, under Donald Trump, has dropped seven places to 64th — pushed down by his systematic policy of attacking the press, detentions and deportation of journalists and the dismantling of the US Agency for Global Media, which led to the closure or downsizing of Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Radio Free Asia.

Syria, after being relegated for years among the bottom 10 nations, has jumped 36 places to 141st following the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s dictatorship in December 2025. The steepest fall has been in Niger.

The sharpest overall decline this year is in the index’s legal indicator, which measures the legislative and judicial environment for journalists. The RSF report specifically names India among the countries where the legal environment for journalism deteriorated. The others named in the same group are Egypt, Israel and Georgia.

The RSF describes the global criminalization of journalism as a phenomenon rooted in the misuse of national security laws, emergency legislation and common law. Russia has become its specialist practitioner, holding 48 journalists behind bars as of April.
(Source: TNS)

 
Endia is almost a failed nation now.

Pakistan is well ahead in terms of international prestige, technology, cleanlimess, happiness index etc.

We are now US #1 ally and China’s entire future hopes depend on their relationship with us.
 
I called this out early during Modi's term. As soon as he entered office his officials started shredding historical records. Presumably so they could start rewriting history to suit their own ideology.
 
The spirit of free expression and critical thought has been been in a freefall ever since the Modi regime came to power but imagine thinking that Pakistan has freer media lol ? These ranking organisations are hurting their own credibility.
 
This is same ranking where rizwan have becomes World number 1 T20 batsman - Fraud 🤣🤣🤣🤣

Everyone's know where Pakistan stand in Press freedom. Even Osama bin Laden to Dawood free living in Pakistan.

So much freedom 🤣🤣🤣

:klopp :kp
 
The spirit of free expression and critical thought has been been in a freefall ever since the Modi regime came to power but imagine thinking that Pakistan has freer media lol ? These ranking organisations are hurting their own credibility.
You are hurting your own credibility with these types of post and can console yourself with imaginary Bollywood scenarios. The objective rankings are in front of you.
 
This is what happens when your erstwhile legit. mainstream media is pounded by useless litigation and then forced to sell off to Modi's crony capitalist friends.

Thank God for AltNews, Caravan, The Wire, The Hindu and others.

You may not like their ideological biases but at least they report facts.

Millions of Indians are listening to the lies spread by our trash mainstream media - propaganda mouthpieces for the ruling party and whose only goal is to ensure that the BJP gets voted again and again.
 
The spirit of free expression and critical thought has been been in a freefall ever since the Modi regime came to power but imagine thinking that Pakistan has freer media lol ? These ranking organisations are hurting their own credibility.
Especially where opposition (elected) leader is in jail and no one can think of protest also.
 
What can other countries learn from India's decline?

Lessons: Do not allow an illiterate, incompetent, and toxic chaiwala to run country. He can take the country to the gutter within a decade. :inti
 
The spirit of free expression and critical thought has been been in a freefall ever since the Modi regime came to power but imagine thinking that Pakistan has freer media lol ? These ranking organisations are hurting their own credibility.

Shot Dead at 3 AM: The Journalist Delhi Failed For 15 Years | Crime Seen​



 
USA, the biggest defender of free speech, is ranked 64 in the world press rankings whereas the UK is #18.

What kind of a paindoo organisation is this ?
 
Pakistan: IFJ report reveals systemic crackdown and existential crisis for media

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) releases its 2025-26 Pakistan Press Freedom Report, documenting a year of steady deterioration for the country’s media environment and increasing risks to independent journalism. The report, released on May 4, paints a grim picture of an industry facing a crisis driven by draconian legislation, digital authoritarianism, and deepening economic challenges.

The IFJ’s Pakistan Press Freedom Report 2025-26 details how the 2025 amendments to the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) have transformed the legislation into a primary mechanism for state surveillance and control. Under the guise of curbing ‘fake news’ and ‘digital terrorism’, authorities have increasingly targeted media workers over online commentary, culminating in unprecedented life sentences handed down to journalists in absentia by anti-terrorism courts. The establishment of the National Cyber Crime Investigation Agency (NCCIA) has intensified this pressure through escalated raids, summons, and the coordinated blocking of journalists’ digital platforms.

The period from May 1, 2025, to April 30, 2026, was marred by persistent threats, harassment, intimidation, and violence against the media, with the IFJ recording the targeted killings of at least three journalists, including A. D. Shar in Sindh, Abdul Latif Baloch in Balochistan, and Imtiaz Mir in Karachi. Other prominent attacks included a raid on the National Press Club in Islamabad in October 2025, with federal police damaging the outlet’s premises, vandalising equipment, and attacking journalists; the assaults of three journalists at a press conference by supporters of the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf party; and unidentified assailants opening fire on the residence of ARY News correspondent Ihsan Khattak in March 2026.

Government advertising continued to be weaponised to ensure editorial compliance, with the media community widely condemning the near-total suspension of ads to the Dawn media group as an attempt to stifle critical reporting. Wage arrears, increasing precarious work across the industry, and weakened labour protections further eroded media independence, compounded by significant job losses at media outlets including NewsOne TV, DawnNews.tv, and Samaa TV.

Pakistani women journalists continued to face harassment, arrest, online abuse, and censorship, with documented incidents including the freezing of bank accounts and sophisticated deepfake attacks. Despite these challenges, Pakistan’s journalist unions and partners, including the IFJ and the Women’s Media Forum Pakistan (WMFP), worked to advance campaigns for gender equality and development for women in leadership. In a major milestone for gender equity in media governance, Ambreen Jan was appointed the first woman to lead the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) in February 2026.

Under the fifth year of its ‘Promoting Labour Rights, Gender Equality and Freedom of Association in Pakistan’s Media’ program, supported by the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the IFJ and its national partners worked to strengthen organisational capacity, advocacy, and leadership. Among key achievements under the project, the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) developed a comprehensive strategic plan to guide its future direction and empower its regional unions, the Rawalpindi Islamabad Union of Journalists (RIUJ) enhanced its advocacy for journalists’ labour rights and working conditions, the Digital Media Alliance of Pakistan (DigiMAP) worked to promote and mentor women’s leadership in digital media, and the Karachi Union of Journalists (KUJ) conducted a member-based survey to improve its communications, engagement, and visibility with members and the wider pubic.

The IFJ said:“The space for independent journalism in Pakistan is being systematically dismantled, with the strategic weaponisation of the PECA law and the rise of judicial harassment representing a transparent attempt to restrict digital spaces and silence dissent. The Pakistani government must act to repeal the draconian cybercrime amendments, ensure accountability for violence against journalists, and end the financial control of independent media outlets. The IFJ stands in solidarity with Pakistan’s media community in the fight for decent work, fair wages, job security, and equality across the industry.”

:klopp :kp

 
Back
Top