CPJ has assembled key safety information and resources for journalists and editors covering the Russian invasion of Ukraine, available in English, Ukrainian, and Russian.
The crisis fund from our colleagues at @rorypecktrust provides grants to journalists to help with temporary relocation and accommodation as well as safety kits including flak jackets, helmets, and more.
Russian and Ukrainian authorities must ensure that members of the press can cover the war in Ukraine safely and freely, and Russian forces must refrain from targeting journalists. cpj.org/2022/03/report…
Since late February, Russian troops have injured at least three journalists from international outlets, and at least one reporter for a Ukrainian outlet has been attacked for their reporting.
As a queer journalist, Maryam Abasian’s sexual and professional identity had long put her at risk in Iran. After authorities repeatedly summoned her for questioning, she fled the country.
The nationwide antigovernment protests that erupted earlier this month in Kazakhstan upended the country’s reputation as one of Eurasia’s most stable authoritarian regimes.
Journalists covering the unrest in #Kazakhstan were detained by police and targeted by mobs. They also worked amid a nationwide internet blackout.
Since the protests, authorities have sentenced at least four journalists to detention and questioned others. cpj.org/2022/01/kazakh…
"No one expected that this kind of thing could happen in Kazakhstan," Madina Alimkhanova, correspondent for international news agency @kaztag_kz, told @CPJ_Eurasia. "No one expected this kind of aggression towards journalists from protesters." cpj.org/2022/01/nothin…
Filipino journalist @mariaressa is battling a spate of spurious libel charges under the #Philippines’ 2012 Cybercrime Prevention Act in connection with reporting by her news website, Rappler, and could face a six-year prison sentence if one conviction is not overturned on appeal.
Bangladeshi reporter Ruhul Amin Gazi has been jailed for over a year without trial because a 2019 report published by his employer, the Daily Sangram newspaper, was available on the internet, triggering a criminal complaint under the Digital Security Act. cpj.org/2022/01/why-th…
"My sister has been targeted because of my journalism," exiled Bangladeshi journalist Kanak Sarwar told CPJ of his sister’s detention. "She is treated like a convicted criminal just because she is my sister."