When Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reporter Robert Tait was taken into custody by Egyptian authorities at a police checkpoint near central Cairo on February 4, he didn’t know he’d become witness to torture. But, cuffed and blindfolded for 28 hours, Tait heard and saw beatings and electrocutions. “My experience, while highly personal, wasn’t really about me or the foreign media,” Tait writes in the U.K. Guardian. “ It was about gaining an insight–if that is possible behind a blindfold–into the inner workings of the Mubarak regime.” It is exactly that kind of insight that can be gained when reporters are allowed to do their jobs, and it is why CPJ exists–to fiercely defend the rights of journalists to do their work. Take a read of our recent Egypt coverage here to get a sense of the massive scale in which journalists have been attacked and detained, and see Tait’s whole piece in the Guardian here.