Ahead of World Press Freedom Day, CPJ and Fundamedios met with Ecuadorian Attorney General Diana Salazar. (Photo courtesy of the attorney general’s office)
Tomorrow is World Press Freedom Day
Tomorrow, Wednesday, May 3, will mark the 30th anniversary of World Press Freedom Day, a celebration of free expression and our collective right to be informed. A generous donor has pledged to match any gift until we reach our goal of $50,000. Learn more »
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CPJ attends SXSW in Austin, Texas
CPJ President Jodie Ginsberg recently participated in a panel at the International Journalism Festival in Perugia, Italy, alongside Wall Street Journal Editor-in-Chief Emma Tucker and other colleagues of Evan’s at the Journal. Learn more »
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Must-reads
CPJ released a special report, “Fragile Progress: The struggle for press freedom in the European Union.” The report finds that despite progress in protecting press freedom, combating threats to journalists in Europe requires sustained action from EU policymakers. The “media have been gagged, spied upon, harassed online, overwhelmed with disinformation, subjected to vexatious lawsuits, charged with revealing state secrets, beaten while covering street protests, banned from public meetings, or publicly criticized by politicians.”
CPJ spoke with Javeria Siddique, the wife of prominent Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif, who authorities said was shot by police in Kenya on October 23, 2022. Siddique, a freelance journalist who has endured online smear campaigns, is fighting for justice in Sharif’s case and calling on the international community to demand answers in what she says is a “targeted killing.” “He is gone, but I am dying every day because of the delay in justice, the hate campaigns, the harassment."
CPJ spoke with six Afghan journalists in exile in Pakistan who fled following the Taliban takeover of the country in 2021. The government in Pakistan recently announced new restrictions that limit movement and raise worries for journalists without valid documents that they could be forced to return to Afghanistan. “People are worried about being identified and arrested if they go out to try to renew their visas. The risk of deportation is putting everyone under pressure,” Samiullah Jahesh told CPJ.
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