A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood
in an open market is afraid of its people. – John F. Kennedy
Latin America & the Caribbean
Uruguay
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| Freedom House Score: 25 (Free) | [Freedom House Methodology] |
| {Lower is Better, Score Ranges from 0 to 100} |
| RSF Score: 11.75 | [RSF Methodology] |
| {Lower is Better, Score Ranges from 0 to ~120} |
Reporters Without Borders Description:
Direct attacks against the press are rare east of the River Plate. Uruguay stands out as exception on a continent with very marked media polarisation. The country passed pioneering legislation on community media in 2007, then in 2008 a law on access to public information. In both cases, the elaboration of these laws was entrusted to an ad hoc working group made up the administration, civil society and representatives of the profession, before their vote in Congress and promulgation by the president. The same system was used to draw up a major draft law to reform the current press legislation and the criminal code. In line with the constitution and the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights, these amendments related to abolition of the crime of “offence” as well as the decriminalisation of “defamation” and “insult”, except in the case of a deliberate threat to private life and “insulting patriotic symbols”. These reforms, which were backed by President Tabare Vazquez and approved by the council of ministers in October 2008, were adopted by Congress.
| Committee to Protect Journalists Description: | [What is the Committee to Protect Journalists?] |
Visit CPJ’s Site for Recent Developments in this Country
| IFEX News: | [What is IFEX?] |

