World Press Freedom Day: 10 Journalists to Free from Prison
Anti-state activity is the most used charge
against journalists
New York, April
29, 2014-As World Press Freedom Day approaches, journalists are languishing in prisons
across the globe.
Uzbek editor Muhammad Bekjanov has been in jail for 15 years-one
of the longest imprisonments of journalists worldwide. Prominent Iranian
journalist Siamak Ghaderi has been beaten
and whipped in custody, and Vietnamese blogger Nguyen Van Hai could barely walk
or talk during a recent prison visit. All three are convicted on anti-state
charges, the leading accusation used to imprison journalists. They are among 10
emblematic cases highlighted in a new campaign by the Committee to Protect Journalists launched
today.
"Intolerant,
repressive societies are using anti-state charges and 'terrorist' labels to intimidate, detain, and
imprison journalists," said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. "On World Press Freedom
Day, we must come together as global citizens to share these brave individual's vital stories while
calling on oppressive governments to release all journalists from jail."
CPJ research
has documented a rise in the jailing of journalists since 2000, a year before
the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States fueled a global
expansion of anti-terrorism and national security laws. Governments have
exploited these laws to silence critical journalists covering sensitive issues
such as insurgencies, political opposition, and ethnic minorities. Of the 211 journalists in jail at the time
of CPJ's most recent prison census, 124, or 60 percent, were jailed on anti-state charges-far
more than jailed on any other type of charge.
The campaign, launched
ahead of World Press Freedom Day on May 3, details cases of 10 journalists
imprisoned by some of the world's worst violators of press freedom, including China, Egypt, Ethiopia, and Turkey.
China and Iran are
currently the leading jailers of journalists, with each country holding about
35 journalists, according to a recent CPJ estimate. Turkey was leading jailer when CPJ published its
most recent prison census at the end of 2013.
Join with CPJ in
calling on authorities in repressive countries to #FreeThePress and release all
journalists held for no other crime than covering issues in the public interest.
###
CPJ is an independent,
nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide
Note
to editors:
CPJ regional and global experts are available for interviews in the
lead-up to World Press Freedom Day.
UNESCO's official theme for World Press Freedom Day 2014 is Media Freedom for a Better
Future: Shaping the Post-2015 Development Agenda. CPJ has repeatedly called for independent media to be put at the center of a new United
Nations framework for global development.
Media contact:
Samantha Libby
Communications Associate
Tel: +1.212.300.9032
Email: [email protected]
#FreeThePress
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10 Journalists To Free From Prison, Fnd Out
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Tuesday, April 29, 2014
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