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Investigating State Attacks on Exiles

  • Global Investigative Journalism Network
  • Rowan Philp

Transnational repression is on the rise, with governments targeting exiled dissidents through violence and surveillance. Investigative journalism, such as The Washington Post’s Repression’s Long Arm series, reveals how states like India and China suppress opposition abroad.

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The Crackdown on Cuba’s Independent Press

  • Columbia Journalism Review
  • David C. Adam

Cuba’s independent press faces a brutal crackdown, with journalists forced into exile after years of harassment and imprisonment. Despite the challenges, independent journalism continues to resist, using digital tools and anonymous sources to expose the regime’s oppressive tactics.

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Are Myanmar’s Exiled Journalists Getting a Fair Deal?

  • Frontier
  • Ben Dunant and Ye Mon

Journalists are allegedly suffering exploitation and abuse at exiled news outlets, but there’s debate over whether the responsibility to respond falls on donors or a media industry that is taking gradual steps to self-regulate.

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Bangladesh Media in Crisis Under the Government

  • International Federation of Journalists
  • Khairuzzaman Kamal

In Bangladesh, the safety of journalists remains precarious, with reporters frequently facing violent attacks under challenging conditions. The harrowing experiences faced by journalists highlights the ongoing crisis facing Bangladeshi media, and the steps that must be taken to ensure their safety, writes Khairuzzaman Kamal of Bangladesh Manobadhikar Sangbadik Forum.

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‘My Job Became a Crime’: A Russian Reporter’s Story

  • BalkanInsight
  • Borislav Visnjic

Elena Kostyuchenko, a Russian investigative journalist living in exile, explains how reporting on Putin’s war from inside Ukraine made her a criminal in her home country – and why people in the Balkans should be wary of Moscow’s propaganda.

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Exiled Journalists Uncovering the Truth

  • The Business Standard
  • Jannatul Naym Pieal

Reports by the media in exile played a crucial role in documenting the atrocities of the Hasina regime in Bangladesh, even in the face of sedition charges. Three of the exiled journalists shared their experiences with The Business Standard.

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Chronicle of Repression Against Belarusian Journalism

  • Press Club Belarus

What has happened to the Belarusian media and journalists since the day of the presidential elections — from 9 August 2020 until today — is an unprecedented case of the eradication of independent journalism in a single country, in the centre of Europe, in the 21st century.

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What Does the Taliban’s New Law Mean for Journalists?

  • 8am Media
  • Eleanor Pugsley

The Taliban’s new law on the “Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice” bans journalists from publishing or broadcasting content the de facto government believes violates Sharia law or insults Muslims. Article 17 describes several restrictions on the media, including a ban on publishing or broadcasting images of living people and animals which the Taliban consider unislamic.

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Afghanistan: RSF Calls for Continued Support for Media in Exile

  • RSF

Afghan media in exile remain economically fragile, even though they are a widely followed source of information, according to a report by the think tank for media professionals, The Fix, and the support fund for journalism in exile, JX Fund, created in 2022 by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and its partners.

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Myanmar’s Exiled Journalists in Thailand

  • The Diplomat
  • Hailun Li

Thousands of journalists fled the junta-controlled zones to the resistance areas or foreign lands, where they remain dedicated to reporting despite the many challenges of life in exile. Hailun Li has collected the stories of three exiled journalists for The Diplomat.

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How Journalists Face Coordinated Discrediting Worldwide

  • Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
  • ‘Fisayo Soyombo

Discrediting journalists involves various tactics such as false copyright claims, social media harassment, and misinformation. Powerful individuals and entities often lead these campaigns, leveraging their influence to silence dissent. The goal is not just to attack the journalist’s character but to undermine the credibility of their stories.

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“Like Swimming in a Swamp”

  • IWPR
  • Mohammad Munir Mehraban

It is estimated that, nearly 2000 journalists have left Afghanistan since the Taliban took power in 2021. Many sought asylum in Europe and North America, while others settled in Afghanistan’s neighbouring countries. Despite severe challenges Afghan reporters in exile remain committed to keeping the flow of independent news from their homeland alive.

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Fact-Checking From Exile

  • JX Fund

When the Taliban took power three years ago, the previously thriving Afghan media landscape collapsed. Many journalists were forced to leave the country and now work remotely. Others have stayed and continue their work despite all dangers. How do editorial teams in exile deal with the challenge of accessing sources on the ground?

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Even in Exile, Russian Journalists Not ‘100% Safe’

  • Voice of America
  • Liam Scott

When the opposition activist Ilya Yashin spoke after being freed from a Russian prison as part of the historic prisoner swap between Washington and Moscow, he said he had been warned never to return. But as the experiences of Russian journalists and critics already in exile show, distance from Moscow is no assurance of safety.

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Vietnam Tightens Leash on Criticism

  • The Washington Post
  • Rebecca Tan

Vietnam’s government has been carrying out its most intense crackdown on critics in decades, jailing droves of activists, lawyers and journalists and driving even more into exile, according to human rights groups and security analysts. Rebecca Tan analyzed the current developments for the Washington Post.

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How Russia Silences Critical Coverage of its War in Ukraine

  • Committee to Protect Journalists
  • Anna Brakha

Advocates estimate that hundreds of Russian journalists have fled into exile, where some continue to face transnational repression such as arrest warrants and jail terms in absentia. Those who remain are under heavy scrutiny as independent reporting hangs on by a thread.

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Journalist Persecution Escalates in Nicaragua and Venezuela

  • The Tico Times / AFP

The controversial re-election of President Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela will “worsen” attacks on the press, said Artur Romeu, the Latin America director of Reporters Without Borders (RSF). He also warned of an escalation in the persecution of journalists in Nicaragua.

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