profile-18916

  

Telesur news channel gives Cubans glimpse of world

Cuba is one of the world’s most censored countries, despite fewer long-term detentions of journalists in recent years, according to CPJ research.  In January, the airing of Latin America’s Telesur TV channel have granted Cubans access to unfiltered news programming, unlike the state-controlled airwaves.  In an interview with the Associated Press, Senior CPJ Americas Program Coordinator,…

Read More ›

CPJ to launch global press freedom assessment

New York, February 5, 2013– The Committee to Protect Journalists will release Attacks on the Press: Journalism on the World’s Front Lines, a yearly assessment of the state of press freedom worldwide, at a press conference on February 14 at the United Nations.

Read More ›

Alleged gang rape and suppression of press freedom in Somalia

CPJ reported on the detention of Somali journalist Abdiaziz Abdinuur for interviewing an internally displaced woman, who claimed she was raped by Somali soldiers while living in a camp last year.  Ahead of UK Prime Minister David Cameron’s meeting with Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, CPJ asked Cameron to urge Mohamud to follow through on his commitment to press…

Read More ›

CPJ Impact

News from the Committee to Protect Journalists, January 2013 CPJ assists record number of journalists in 2012CPJ’s Journalist Assistance program provided support to a record number of journalists in 2012. The organization assisted at least 195 reporters, editors, and photographers from across the globe with legal, financial, medical, exile, and family support. Journalists from East…

Read More ›

CPJ alarmed by Iran’s escalating anti-press actions

New York, January 30, 2013–The Committee to Protect Journalists is alarmed by the arrest of a another journalist as part of Iran’s declared intent to expand a crackdown on the media.

Read More ›

Journalists back petition against privacy law

CPJ called on Hong Kong’s government to withdraw a proposal that would limit journalists’ access to information about business leaders.  The proposal would obstruct investigative reporting and affect the transparency of businesses, CPJ found. Bob Dietz, CPJ Program Coordinator for Asia, speaks to China’s South China Morning Post, on the downward trend for media with the proposed law.  Click…

Read More ›

Burma’s media landscape shifts, but self-censorship remains

CPJ has consistently advocated for Burma’s government to repeal restrictive media laws.  In a recent report, CPJ research shows all privately run news publications in Burma are forced to publish weekly rather than daily due to stifling pre-publication censorship requirements. Irrawaddy reports on the media censorship climate in Burma–despite reformed media laws, and quotes CPJ Senior Southeast Asia representative,…

Read More ›

Where truth is a hard cell

As of December 2012, CPJ identified 49 jailed journalists in Turkey.  According to CPJ research, the state’s use of broad anti-terrorism charges to jail critical reporting makes the country a leading jailer of journalists.In the Columbia Journalism Review, CPJ Deputy Director, Rob Mahoney, comments on the Turkish government’s use of legislation to silence critical reporters.Click…

Read More ›

Mexico’s freedom of expression crisis

According to CPJ research, reporting has become a deadly profession for journalists in Mexico.  In an editorial for The Miami Herald, CPJ Senior Americas Program Coordinator, Carlos Lauria, evaluates the ongoing press freedom crisis in Mexico and calls on the country’s new president, Enrique Pena Nieto, to combat the issue.   Click here for the full story

Read More ›

Journalists in prison reach record high: Turkey, Iran, and China among leading jailers

New York, December 11, 2012–The number of journalists imprisoned worldwide reached a record high this year, a trend driven primarily by terrorism and other anti-state charges levied against critical reporters and editors, according to a new report by the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Read More ›