At least 65 journalists missing globally

The names of the 65 journalists who are currently missing globally, according to CPJ’s research. (CPJ/Daria Locher)

August 30 marked the International Day of Victims of Enforced Disappearances, with CPJ documenting at least 65 journalists missing globally. Official indifference and failure to investigate these disappearances cast a chill on other reporters and devastate the journalists’ families, who are often left in the dark with little to no support.

➡️  Mexican journalist Jorge Molontzín Centlal vanished in 2021 in Mexico, the country with the highest number of missing journalists globally—16.

➡️  Nearly one in four documented missing journalists disappeared in Iraq and Syria between 2012 and 2014. Some have been missing longer: Isam al-Shumari, an Iraqi camera operator for Sudost Media, went missing in Fallujah, Iraq, on August 15, 2004. It was the same day his friend and colleague, camera operator Mahmoud Abbas, was killed while on assignment for German station ZDF.

➡️  Journalist Azory Gwanda went missing in Tanzania in November 2017. Nearly six years after his disappearance, Tanzania’s government has failed to account for his whereabouts.

We continue to fight and advocate for all missing journalists globally—they are missing but not forgotten. CPJ calls on governments to provide accountability and investigations into their disappearances.

What can you do?

💡 Learn more about the journalists missing globally on our website.

📣 Share their #MissingNotForgotten stories on social media.

Global press freedom updates

Spotlight

Police officers are seen in Lagos, Nigeria, on March 18, 2023, while investigating a recent attack on journalists reporting in Bayelsa state. (AFP/Pius Utomi Ekpei)

This week, CPJ called on Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Adekunle Tinubu to improve press freedom as he marked three months in office.

Tinubu must “ensure justice is delivered for attacks on the press and…reform legislation and regulations to prevent the jailing and surveillance of journalists. We also urge you to ensure undisrupted access to the internet, online platforms, and news websites,” CPJ wrote in a letter to the president.

The letter catalogs recent press freedom violations in Nigeria, including during the elections that brought Tinubu into office, which we discussed in a previous edition of The Torch.

Read the full letter here.


⚡️Join us at an in-person event:

On September 26, the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism and the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University are hosting an event on press freedom and policing at the Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice in New York.

The event will feature a reception, a short documentary film screening of “Flashpoint: Protests, Policing, and the Press,” and a panel discussion on the Knight Institute’s recent report, Covering Democracy: Protests, Police and the Press.

CPJ, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, PEN America, and Freedom of the Press Foundation are co-sponsors.

Find more information and RSVP here.

What we are reading

CPJ’s most-read features in August

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