FREE PRESSHaiti, Mexico most perilous for mediaReporters Without Borders released their annual report showing countries that have jailed or killed numerous journalists.BY JOE MOZINGOjmozingo@MiamiHerald.comSeven journalists were killed in Latin America and the Caribbean last year, with Haiti and Mexico being the most dangerous countries for reporters, said an annual report released today by the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders.
Cuba meanwhile, has become the ''world's second biggest prison for journalists'' with 24 in jail, the group wrote. Only China, with 115 times the population of Cuba, imprisons more, with 32.
The war in Iraq accounted for 24 of the 63 journalists killed around the world during the year, the report said. That brought the total of journalists killed in that nearly three-year-old conflict to 76, more than the number killed during two decades of fighting in Vietnam.
In Latin America, the seven killings were down from 2004, as were physical attacks in general, but violence was still a major problem in drug trafficking areas.
In Mexico, drug cartels continued to pose a serious threat to the media. Almost all the 16 Mexican journalists killed since 2000 ''were writing about highly sensitive issues such as drug-trafficking and police corruption,'' the report said.
In Haiti, where journalists hoped the ousting of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in Feb. 2004 would bring more freedom, violence continued to engulf society. Radio reporter Laraque Robenson, 24, was killed during a gunfight in March, when U.N. peacekeepers moved to dislodge a gang of former soldiers from a police station in Petit Goave.
''The fatal shots were alleged to have been fired by peacekeepers,'' the report said. The U.N. Mission in Haiti ``carried out an internal investigation but never released its findings.''
Jacques Roche, a columnist and editor at Le Matin, was kidnapped on July 10 and found dead four days later.

http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ne ... 543422.htm