Protesters and media members in Sidon, Lebanon, carry pictures during an October 26, 2024, sit-in condemning the killings Al Mayadeen television network’s Ghassan Najjar and Mohammad Reda, and Al Manar’s Wissam Qassem, who were killed in an Israeli strike in the southern Lebanese town of Hasbaya. (Photo: Reuters/Aziz Taher)
CPJ drastically stepped up its assistance work in 2024, helping more than 3,000 journalists with financial grants, safety training, and other kinds of support amid rising threats to the media and declining press freedom. In a new feature, CPJ’s Lucy Westcott explains the top five ways CPJ helped journalists around the globe last year. Among the highlights:
CPJ gave $300,000 to three organizations supporting Gaza’s journalists as they cover and endure war: the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, and Filastiniyat. It also gave grants to Lebanese freedom of expression groups helping journalists escape Israeli bombardment.
CPJ helped to host three online mental health workshops attended by 160 Ukrainian journalists, who learned how to prevent burnout when working in a war zone, how to remain calm while reporting during air raids and explosions, and how to work effectively under shelling.
Ahead of the U.S. election, CPJ trained more than 740 journalists on physical and digital safety, and provided U.S.-based journalists with resiliency and know-your-rights advice through a summer webinar series with partner organizations.
José Rubén Zamora leaves jail for house arrest on October 18, 2024. (Photo: AP/Moises Castillo)
Guatemalan journalist José Rubén Zamora could go back to jail on January 13 if the country’s Supreme Court doesn’t agree to hear an appeal made by his defense.
Zamora, 67, was granted house arrest on October 18, 2024 after spending 813 days in prison on money laundering charges that were widely criticized as politically motivated. A Guatemalan appeals court ordered Zamora back to jail the following month, but he has remained under house arrest while his appeal is pending.
“It’s inhumane what the Guatemalan judicial system is doing to journalist José Rubén Zamora,” said CPJ’s Latin American program coordinator, Cristina Zahar. “His presumption of innocence was shattered for more than two years when he was arbitrarily detained. He must be immediately released.”
Myat Thu Tan, a contributor to the local news website Western News and correspondent for several independent Myanmar news outlets, was shot and killed on January 31, 2024, while in military custody in Mrauk-U in Myanmar’s western Rakhine State.
He was arrested on September 22, 2022, and held in pre-trial detention under a broad provision of the penal code that criminalizes incitement and the dissemination of false news for critical posts he made on his Facebook page. Myat Thu Tan had not been tried or convicted at the time of his death.
The journalist’s body was found buried in a bomb shelter, with the bodies of six other political detainees, and showed signs of torture.
Myanmar’s military junta has cracked down on journalists and media outlets since seizing power in a February 2021 coup.