
On the day Ugandan editor Andrew Mwenda was introduced
in Washington as a recipient of a CPJ International Press Freedom Award, police back home
summoned the journalist for questioning
over his magazine's hard-hitting political coverage. Mwenda
told reporters at a press conference that he is undaunted. The other awardees
are: Danish Karokhel and Farida Nekzad from
Afghanistan, Bilal Hussein from
Iraq, imprisoned Cuban journalist
Héctor Maseda Gutiérrez, and Zimbabwean media lawyer Beatrice
Mtetwa.
• CPJ's International Press Freedom Awards.
Special Report: Five who have fled their homes offer a picture of the difficulties facing journalists in exile.
Special report: The world watched in horror when Paul Klebnikov was gunned down in Russia. Much was done to solve the case. Then it all came unraveled in a Moscow court. br>
November 10, 2008 --Vladimir Putin has often seemed indifferent to violence against the press, but Steve LeVine believes there is one case the Russian leader genuinely wanted solved--the 2004 assassination of Forbes Russia editor Paul Klebnikov. That no convictions have been won in the slaying reflects an embedded culture of impunity rather than a lack of political will, LeVine and others say in "Into the Ether."
• CPJ's Campaign Against Impunity.
A CPJ special report: Reporters are vanishing in Mexico. Who can be trusted to investigate?
Mexico's criminal gangs have a long history of silencing the press by brazenly gunning down reporters in broad daylight. But in a new report, "
The Disappeared," CPJ details an ominous new trend: Seven Mexican reporters have vanished in just three years, a tally nearly unprecedented worldwide. CPJ examines the possible involvement of local police and public officials in this rash of disappearances.
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Versión en español
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Map: A Trail of Disappearances
Special report: Tunisia offers a warm embrace to its friends internationally. At home, it silences critics with a vengeance
September 23, 2008—Tunisia promotes itself as a progressive nation that protects human rights, but a CPJ investigation has found that it aggressively silences journalists and others who challenge the policies of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. In a new report, “The Smiling Oppressor,” CPJ has found journalists subject to routine imprisonment, assault, harassment, and censorship.
» Versión française
» Audio Slideshow: Joel Campagna on the backstory.
