More than one month since Russia invaded Ukraine, journalists continue to face grave risks while covering the war. This week, reporters have been shot, injured, and detained, and others remain missing.
In Russia, authorities have detained and harassed journalists for their reporting, and the Novaya Gazeta newspaper – one of the last bastions of Russia’s free press – shut down after receiving a warning from the country’s media regulator.
“The problem with laws in Russia is that it’s very difficult, if not impossible, to predict how they will be applied,” Igor Yasin, co-chair of the country’s Journalists’ and Media Workers’ Union, told CPJ while discussing new legislation punishing the dissemination of “fake” information on the war. “It is impossible to speak about the future with any clarity.”
CPJ continues to focus on helping enhance the safety of those covering the conflict and documenting press freedom violations on the ground. Explore our interactive map to learn more about those who have tragically died covering the conflict.
- CPJ condemns ‘unjustified’ block on journalist Rana Ayyub leaving India
- Taliban detain and release at least seven journalists and media workers; ban broadcasts from the BBC, VOA, and DW
- Myanmar Herald journalist Ye Yint Tun sentenced to two years in prison. Separately, a military court also sentenced journalists Hanthar Nyein and Than Htike Aung to two years each in prison
- Pakistani journalist Zahid Shareef Rana attacked in Punjab province
- Political reporter Altan Sancar threatened at gunpoint in Turkey
- Nicaraguan publisher Juan Lorenzo Holmann convicted on money laundering charges
- Israeli journalists call for spyware exemption after Israel denies illegal Pegasus use
- Serbian journalist Miljko Stojanovic threatened over interview with Ukrainian refugee
- British journalist Martin Banks detained and questioned by U.K. border police, equipment confiscated
- CPJ spoke to Pakistani refugee reporter Mohsin Abbas, who saved a local Canadian newspaper
Filipino American journalist and Nobel Laureate Maria Ressa testified to the U.S. Senate on Wednesday about freedom of expression in Asia. Ressa is facing threats in the Philippines as state-orchestrated attacks escalate against her and Rappler, the news organization she founded.
“I could go to jail for the rest of life because I refuse to stop doing my job as a journalist,” Ressa told the Senate subcommittee. Watch the full testimony here.
In 2018, Ressa received CPJ’s Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award in recognition of her sustained and committed work as a champion of press freedom. CPJ has also been a leader of the #HoldTheLine coalition, alongside the International Center for Journalists and Reporters Without Borders, to help support Ressa and defend independent journalism in the Philippines.
- Rival networks aided Fox News after Ukraine tragedy, highlighting war-zone collaboration — Alexandra Bruell and Benjamin Mullin, The Wall Street Journal
- Spanish-language reporter facing deportation gets asylum — Adrian Sainz, The Associated Press
- How Ukraine’s internet still works despite Russian bombs, cyberattacks — Gerrit De Vynck, Rachel Lerman, and Cat Zakrzewski, The Washington Post
- Your right to film the police is under attack — Trone Dowd, Vice
A closer look | CPJ’s most-read features in March
- Dozhd TV editor Tikhon Dzyadko on why he fled Russia and shut his broadcaster down — Gulnoza Said, Europe and Central Asia program coordinator
- Brent Renaud brought heart and compassion to his filmmaking — June Cross
- The view from Ukraine, through the eyes of local journalists — Katherine Jacobsen, U.S. and Canada program coordinator, and Naomi Zeveloff, features editor
- Afghanistan’s intelligence agency emerges as new threat to independent media — Waliullah Rahmani, Asia researcher, and Steven Butler, Asia program coordinator
- ‘There will be more repression’: Exiled Russian journalist Irina Borogan on Moscow’s censorship of Ukraine invasion — Katherine Jacobsen, U.S. and Canada program coordinator