In Belarus, authorities are ‘purging the media space’

Clockwise from top left: Volha Siakhovich, a legal expert with the Belarusian Association of Journalists; Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator; and Gypsy Guillén Kaiser, CPJ’s advocacy and communications director, at a CPJ press briefing on Belarus held June 9, 2021. (CPJ)

As the EU moves forward with sanctions against Belarus, in response to the detention of journalist Raman Pratasevich, CPJ held a press briefing Wednesday to shed light on the broad range of restrictions and reprisals facing journalists there. CPJ noted the upcoming Biden-Putin summit as an opportunity to focus on press freedom and welcomed a recent statement of alarm by UN Special Rapporteurs. “Belarusian authorities have been practically purging the media space…with unprecedented levels of cruelty, using a very systemic approach,” said CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Gulnoza Said.

In a flagrant disregard for access to information in Nigeria, authorities ordered Twitter to be blocked in the country starting June 5. The country’s broadcast regulator issued a press release, dated June 6, ordering all broadcast outlets to cease publishing information on Twitter and using it as a news source.

Global press freedom updates

Spotlight

CPJ’s map lists 38 journalists, commentators, and their close associates targeted with spyware, as well as the states suspected in each case and the companies that allegedly supplied the spyware. (CPJ)

CPJ announced this week that it is joining the newly launched MENA Coalition to Combat Digital Surveillance, which will fight for a safe and open internet, support human rights globally, and work to end the sales of digital surveillance tools by repressive governments in the region. The coalition is co-led by the Gulf Centre for Human Rights and Access Now.

Learn more about digital threats globally in CPJ’s ongoing reporting on how spyware products marketed to governments to fight crime have been used to target and surveil the press, as well as our spyware briefer for policy-makers.

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