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Japan’s low press freedom ranking signals self-censorship remains rife: analysts

Political pressure affects media coverage in Japan as journalists fear angering the government over their reporting, analysts say

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Japan ranked 66th out of 180 countries and regions for press freedom in the annual Reporters Without Borders survey. Photo: AFP
Japan’s continuous low ranking for press freedom among the Group of Seven nations signals that it is still facing long-standing issues of political pressure, corporate influence and self-censorship in its media landscape, according to analysts.

The annual survey by Reporters Without Borders released on Friday ranked Japan 66th out of 180 countries and regions, up four places from last year. But Japan was still the lowest-ranked G7 nation and below developing countries such as the Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone and East Timor.

Some media analysts have expressed cautious optimism that Japanese news outlets might be recovering some of the editorial freedom lost over the past two decades, as younger journalists push back against restrictive norms and political control over the media shows signs of loosening.

Paris-based Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, described Japan as a parliamentary democracy where media freedom and pluralism are broadly respected, but it warned that “traditional and business interests, political pressure and gender inequalities often prevent journalists from completely fulfilling their role as watchdogs”.

Japanese governments have long been criticised for requiring members of the media to become part of a press club system if they want to attend any press conferences at any of the ministries and for access to government officials. Reporting critical of the government can result in press club credentials being withdrawn and media organisations losing access to news sources.

The consequence is that media outlets hesitate to ask awkward questions or report issues that they fear will upset the government, according to critics.

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