‘I tried to kill myself slowly through hunger strikes’ – Chinese journalist opens up about imprisonment, alleged torture

Photos from left: Chinese journalist Wang Jing (Wang Jing); and Bangladeshi cartoonist Kabir Kishore (AFP/Munir Uz zaman)

In a rare interview, Tianwang 64 journalist Wang Jing told CPJ about her alleged torture at the hands of Chinese authorities during her nearly five-year imprisonment for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble.” She is now seeking asylum in the United States. China is the world’s worst jailer of journalists and authorities continue to harass journalists even after they go free. Foreign correspondents in the country face COVID-19-related restrictions and expulsions. This week, authorities’ harassment of the BBC’s John Sudworth led him to flee to Taiwan.

In another harrowing account from a journalist who was jailed, cartoonist Kabir Kishore told CPJ he was tortured while imprisoned in Bangladesh under the country’s Digital Security Act. Days before his release, his colleague Mushtaq Ahmed, a co-accused in the case against Kishore, died in custody. “If you harass people for cartoons, for art, you are controlling people, the rights of people,” Kishore said. Separately in Bangladesh, at least 17 journalists were injured covering protests.

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To mark the 10th anniversary of the death of Anton Hammerl, the widow of the Austrian-South African photojournalist launched a campaign for accountability. Government forces shot and killed Hammerl in eastern Libya on April 5, 2011. Three journalists traveling with him, Manuel Varela, Clare Gillis, and James Foley, were detained by Libyan authorities for weeks; they announced Hammerl’s death after they were released. After years of inaction and unanswered questions, his family deserves the truth. Show your solidarity on Twitter by tagging the handle @justice_4_anton and using the hashtag #JusticeForAnton.


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