On eve of UN human rights review, CPJ, 10 others urge Nicaragua to stop persecuting journalists

Exiled Nicaraguan journalists report on their home country from San Jose, Costa Rica in 2022. Human rights and journalists' groups have reported that press freedom is almost nonexistent in Nicaragua. (Photo: AP/Moises Castillo)

Exiled Nicaraguan journalists report on their home country from San Jose, Costa Rica in 2022. Human rights and journalists' groups have reported that press freedom is almost nonexistent in Nicaragua. (Photo: AP/Moises Castillo)

The Committee to Protect Journalists and 10 other journalism and human rights groups sent a letter on Monday, November 11, to the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva ahead of its November 13 Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of Nicaragua’s human rights record.

The letter is a response to a September report by the State of Nicaragua asserting that there have been no violations of freedom of expression during the U.N. evaluation period (2019-2023). But reports from press freedom and human rights groups and international bodies show that press freedom in the country is nearly nonexistent.

The coalition of organizations calls on the Nicaraguan government to stop persecuting and criminalizing journalists and other dissenting voices, and urges the UNRHC to support press freedom and adopt measures to protect it.

Read the letter in English here.

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