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Global patterns show that democracy around the world continued to weaken last year, according to a new report. The Global State of Democracy 2025, published by the Stockholm-based International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), analyzed democratic performance in 173 countries in 2024. In the report, 94 countries — or just over half of those surveyed — showed a decline in at least one of the key democracy indicators between 2019 and 2024, the report said. In comparison, only a third made progress. "The current state of democracy in the world is concerning," IDEA Secretary General Kevin Casas-Zamora said. Some of the biggest declines compared to 2019 were seen around the holding of credible elections, access to justice and having an effective parliament, the report found. Africa accounted for the largest share of the global decline with 33%, followed by Europe with 25%. West Asia is the region ranking lowest on democratic performance. Europe dominates democracy rankings The report highlighted some positive examples, such Botswana and South Africa making consistent advances when it comes to credible elections, with both countries holding polls in 2024 that led to historic changes. New start for Botswana after historic election 02:08 Denmark was the only country in the top five of all four democratic categories explored in the study: Representation, rule of law, participation and rights. These rankings were dominated by European nations such as Germany, Switzerland, Norway and Luxembourg, with Costa Rica, Chile and Australia also scoring well. Press freedom sees biggest fall in 50 years The "very acute deterioration in press freedom," was an important finding, Keven Casas-Zamora said. Between 2019 and 2024, the world saw "the biggest drop over the past 50 years," he said. Press freedoms declined in 43 countries across all continents, including 15 in Africa and 15 in Europe. "We've never seen such an acute deterioration in a key indicator of democratic health," he said. The image shows DW News correspondent Fanny Facsar and Palestinian journalist Issam Rimawi, both wearing vests with the word 'press' on them and helmets standing on a street talking.The image shows DW News correspondent Fanny Facsar and Palestinian journalist Issam Rimawi, both wearing vests with the word 'press' on them and helmets standing on a street talking. Palestinian journalist Issam Rimawi (left) and DW News correspondent Fanny Facsar were threatened with weapons and fired on with tear gas by Israeli soldiers while filming in RamallahImage: DW Afghanistan, Burkina Faso and Myanmar — already among the poorest performers in press freedoms — posted the biggest falls, followed by South Korea. The Asian nation saw a "spike in defamation cases initiated by the government and its political allies against journalists, and raids on journalists' residences," the report found. Casas-Zamora attributed the global fall in media freedom to a combination of heavy-handed interventions on the part of governments, pandemic legacies and "the very negative impact of disinformation." "Some of [this] is real disinformation and some of which is used as a pretext by governments to clamp down on press freedoms," he said.