This week, CPJ released its 2019 prison census, finding that China, Turkey, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia are the worst jailers of journalists worldwide. For the fourth consecutive year, at least 250 journalists are imprisoned globally. While the majority face anti-state charges, the number charged with “false news” rose to 30 compared with 28 last year. See more findings in this video.
The report is available in nine languages: English, Français, Español, Portuguȇs, فارسی, Русский, Türkçe, العربية, 中文.
CPJ will release two additional reports this month: “One Country, One Censor,” on Chinese influence in Hong Kong and Taiwan, will be published Monday December 16, and our annual report on journalists killed in relation to their work will be published on Wednesday, December 18.
CPJ’s prison census was accompanied by several blog posts:
- Iranian journalist imprisoned, fired, and forced into exile over a single word
- ‘I could be jailed at any moment’: Turkish editor in limbo over terms of prison release
- For the sake of press freedom, Julian Assange must be defended
- Nigeria and Ethiopia jail activist-journalists amid crackdown on free expression
Global press freedom updates:
- US-Nigerian Sahara Reporters website says assets frozen amid surveillance, censorship
- One journalist killed, another missing amid protests in Iraq
- Syrian Kurdish journalist Himbervan Kousa arrested at Kuala Lumpur airport
- Duterte threatens to shut down Philippine broadcaster ABS-CBN
- Palestinian journalist Sameh al-Titi arrested by Israeli authorities, held without charge
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