As Russian forces invade Ukraine, Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator, explains in a Q&A the possible risks for journalists on the ground, including being killed, injured, or taken hostage, and the potential challenges of reporting amid misinformation and disinformation. If a new pro-Kremlin regime is installed in Ukraine, it “would likely target journalists and activists, especially those critical of Russia—which would mean any independent journalist, from the Russian point of view.”
CPJ called Thursday for protection of journalists in Ukraine. “At this critical moment, it is crucial that all parties involved recognize that all journalists and media workers are civilians under international humanitarian law, and their rights must be respected and protected,” said CPJ Executive Director Robert Mahoney. “With disinformation increasingly becoming a common tool for warfare, the work of journalists and the flow of free and independent information must be protected, in keeping with United Nations Security Council Resolution 2222 (2015) on the protection of journalists and media professionals working in conflict areas.”
Journalists covering the conflict and related unrest should consult the following safety advice, available in multiple languages:
- War reporting: English | Ukrainian | Russian
- Arrest and detention: English | Ukrainian | Russian
- Civil disorder: English | Ukrainian | Russian
- Internet shutdowns: English | Ukrainian | Russian
- Personal Protective Equipment Guide
- Essential steps for journalists in emergency situations (Global Investigative Journalism Network)
- Fact-checking (First Draft)
If you are a journalist in need of emergency assistance, please contact emergencies@cpj.org
Global press freedom updates
- Turkish journalist Güngör Arslan killed
- Security forces detain two more journalists in northern Syria
- Ethiopia ends emergency, but pursues new cases against three detained journalists
- Attorney general in Brazil files criminal defamation complaint against journalist Thiago Herdy
- Spanish court orders investigation of four journalists over testimony in police abuse case
- Pakistan expands prison terms for online defamation to five years
- CPJ condemns “harsh” nine-year sentence for Nicaraguan journalist Miguel Mendoza
- CPJ calls on President Aliyev to protect press freedom, journalist safety in Azerbaijan
Spotlight
This week, A Safer World For The Truth, an initiative of which CPJ is a core member, and openDemocracy released the latest podcast episode in the “Killing the Truth” series. The episode follows the case of slain Gambian journalist Deyda Hydara, managing editor and co-owner of The Point, as well as a correspondent for Agence France-Presse (AFP) and Reporters without Borders (RSF). Hydara was shot to death on December 16, 2004, two days after the Gambian National Assembly passed two contentious pieces of media legislation that Hydara, along with other local independent journalists had strongly opposed. He was also known for writing articles critical of the government.
Listen to the latest episode here and on Spotify here, and keep an eye out this coming Monday, February 28, for the release of A Safer World For The Truth’s latest investigative report on the 2011 murder of journalist Gerardo Ortega in the Philippines.
Before the Winter Olympics wrapped up Sunday, CPJ signed onto a joint letter led by the Sports & Rights Alliance to Thomas Bach, the president of the International Olympic Committee, calling on the committee to address the critical human rights issues, including press freedom, around Beijing 2022 and prevent similar abuses at all future events.
A closer look | CPJ’s most-read features in February
- Threats, attacks, and insults: Canadian reporters on covering vaccine mandate protests — By Rebecca Redelmeier, CPJ audience engagement associate
- Ukraine editor Olga Rudenko on starting Kyiv Independent as Russia amasses troops on border — By Ann Cooper
- A jar of soil, a laptop, a handmade black coat: What Afghan journalists took into exile — By Matt Schofield, CPJ Asia consultant
- Women journalists in India feel more at risk after ‘auction’ apps worsen online abuse — By Kunal Majumder, CPJ India correspondent
- Helmets and body armor: How Ukraine’s press corps is prepping for possible war — By Gulnoza Said, CPJ Europe and Central Asia program coordinator
What we are reading
- Ten years on, a new brave cohort tends the legacy of Marie Colvin — Lindsey Hilsum, The Times
- China’s repression of journalists: no more borders, no more constraints — Coda Story
- ‘I’m Afraid That I Cannot Be a Journalist Anymore’ — Timothy McLaughlin, The Atlantic