Myanmar’s military seized power from the elected government February 1, obstructing news stations, temporarily shuttering phone and internet access, and later restricting access to social media platforms. “Social media and communication platforms are crucial for journalists to report the news as democracy is upended,” said Shawn Crispin, CPJ’s senior Southeast Asia representative, urging officials to rescind an order blocking Facebook services and lift restrictions on broadcasters at a moment when people are in desperate need of information.
In Australia, a proposed law would force Facebook and Google to pay for the news they use to improve their feeds and search results, in the hopes of redistributing some of the revenue generated by the tech giants back to the news industry. In an op-ed published by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, CPJ Advocacy Director Courtney Radsch urges regulators to level the playing field and give the media a fighting chance to reclaim a share of the advertising pie.
Global press freedom updates
- Lebanese columnist, Hezbollah critic Lokman Slim shot and killed
- For the second straight week, Russian police detained and harassed press covering pro-Navalny protests. Journalists told CPJ about the risks they’re facing
- Police attack journalists with tear gas and rubber bullets at Istanbul protest
- Kazakh police detain, harass editor of independent weekly Uralskaya Nedelya
- Indian police arrest, investigate journalists covering farmers’ protests
- Vietnam-based hacking operation OceanLotus targeted journalists in Germany
- Iraqi Kurdish security forces arrest photojournalist Qaraman Shukri
- Turkey to begin retrial of RSF representative, other press freedom advocates on terrorism charges
- Moroccan journalist Maati Monjib sentenced to one year in prison
- Kurdish Syrian journalist Fanar Mahmoud Tami abducted
- Cuban internet access cut amid free expression protest; journalist harassed
- CPJ and the #HoldTheLine coalition publish statement in support of embattled Rappler editor Maria Ressa
Spotlight
In a year already marked by waves of protests and political upheaval across the globe, it is apt that the journalists featured on the February One Free Press Coalition list have all faced serious threats in relation to their reporting on polarizing elections and protests in countries like Iran, China, and the U.S. Read the list to learn more about their stories.
Each month, CPJ and the International Women’s Foundation select urgent cases for the coalition’s consideration, harnessing the audiences of 30+ news outlets around the world to bring attention to these brave journalists and the threats they face. Media looking for advice should also check out our safety information on covering elections and civil disorder.
What we are reading
- Final warning: death threats and killings of human rights defenders — Report of the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, Mary Lawlor
- Trust in the media in Latin America: the same old story? — Camila Mont’Alverne, Amy Ross Arguedas, Benjamin Toff, and Sumitra Badrinathan, London School of Economics
- The End of the Indian Idea — Vidya Krishnan, The Atlantic
- My husband’s killer could go free in Pakistan. Despite the injustice, I still have hope. — Mariane Pearl, The Washington Post