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Exiled Sudanese Journalists Risk All to Document the War

  • The New Arab
  • Fath Al-Rahman Hamouda

Sudanese journalists forced into exile in Uganda are risking their safety to report on the war back home, ensuring the conflict remains in the global spotlight. Despite limitations, international support is emerging, with the Thomson Foundation offering programmes for civil society organisations and journalists in conflict zones, focusing on crisis communication, advocacy, resilience, and the disproportionate impact of conflict on women in media and civil society.

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‘Ten million people read us — I’ll talk to them’

  • Meduza

On June 11, at Berlin’s Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien gallery, Meduza publisher Galina Timchenko sat down with sociologist Polina Aronson for a conversation about the emotional toll of today’s news cycle — on both readers and journalists. One of the questions raised during the Q&A was how censorship is reshaping the ways newsrooms connect with their audiences.

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Home or Exile? Syrian Journalists Grapple With New Realities

  • Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
  • Lamiya Adilgizi

After almost 14 years of civil war, the lightning overthrow of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad in December has unleashed the possibility of returning home for hundreds of exiled journalists. Complex legal and family obligations, security concerns, and sectarian tensions mean permanent return is rarely an option.

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Iran Carries Out Arrests, Executions Amid Israel Conflict

  • BBC Persian

Iranian authorities have carried out a wave of arrests and multiple executions of people suspected of links to Israeli intelligence agencies, in the wake of the recent war between the two countries. Analysts view these tactics as part of a broader strategy to silence dissent and intimidate exiled media workers.

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Iranians in Exile: Life in Limbo

  • Tagesspiegel
  • Mahtab Qolizadeh

Exiled journalist Mahtab Qolizadeh highlights the struggles of Iranian asylum seekers in Germany, caught between bureaucracy and uncertainty. As the Iran-Israel conflict deepens, many—like political dissident Alborz Zahedi—remain in limbo, hoping for change but facing a system that offers little clarity or relief.

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Nicaragua: Exile the Only Option for Journalists

  • RSF

The systematic and relentless persecution orchestrated by the Ortega-Murillo regime has led to the closure, confiscation, and expulsion of hundreds of independent media outlets and journalists from the country. For many, exile has become the only way to escape censorship, threats, and physical attacks – and to continue reporting.

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Ensuring Journalists in Exile Don’t Go Silent

  • JHR

At JHR, forcibly displaced people are recognized as among the most vulnerable and marginalized. Their stories are often overlooked, their rights de-prioritized. Journalists play a key role in changing that—which is why JHR trains and equips them to report on the realities of displacement and amplify refugees’ voices.

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Junge Presse-Podcast on Exiled Journalism

  • Junge Presse

This podcast episode features a conversation with Sergey Lukashevskiy about his work as a Russian exile journalist in Germany. Having lived in Germany since 2022, he is developing “Radio Sakharov” as a media outlet for the Russian exile community. He discusses the challenges of reporting from exile, and the state of human rights and press freedom in Russia.

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Nicaraguan Journalists Ask Spain For Citizenship

  • LatAm Journalism Review (LJR)
  • Katherine Pennacchio

After fleeing persecution by Daniel Ortega’s regime, seven Nicaraguan journalists exiled in Costa Rica have been unable to renew their identification documents: Nicaragua refuses them, and Costa Rica has yet to fully recognize them. They are not locked in a terminal, but they have no homeland.

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Iran Targets Families to Silence Journalists Abroad

  • OCCRP

The Iranian regime has launched a fresh wave of intimidation against exiled Iranian journalists and their families back home, dissident media workers and human rights advocates claim. Earlier this week, the BBC publicly accused the Iranian government of escalating its long-standing harassment of journalists working for its Persian-language service.

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The Death of Journalism in Azerbaijan

  • OCCRP

A relentless crackdown over the past 18 months has eradicated any semblance of independent media from authoritarian Azerbaijan. But as President Ilham Aliyev casts critical journalists as enemies of the state, they continue to try to hold power to account — from exile, or even from behind bars.

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The Evolution and Future of Persian Exile Media

  • Iran1400
  • Vafa Mostaghim

For over four decades, Persian-language media in exile have played an influential, often contentious role in shaping public discourse about Iran. Emerging in response to the silencing of dissent and the monopolization of narratives by the Islamic Republic, these media outlets created a parallel space of dialogue and imagination.

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Why Russian Journalists Keep Reporting Despite the Risks

  • Meduza
  • Lilia Yapparova

Inside Russia, journalists carry on working — risking arrest, surveillance, and the safety of their families, or navigating the shifting boundaries of state censorship. Meduza spoke with several of them about the constraints they face, the stories they can no longer tell, and how they view their colleagues in exile.

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Journalism in Exile From Costa Rica: Lucía Pineda Ubau

  • DW Akademie

Lucía Pineda Ubau is the director of the news channel 100% Noticias and has been living in exile in Costa Rica since 2019. Her homeland, Nicaragua, has been under repressive rule since 2007, when President Daniel Ortega started systematically building an autocratic government, including pressuring political opponents who were increasingly criticizing him.

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Keeping National Languages Alive in the AI Era

  • Reuters Institute
  • Gretel Kahn

Experts from India, Belarus, Nigeria, Mali, Paraguay and the Philippines explain how they are building tools to bridge gaps between newsrooms and audience. Since the launch of ChatGPT in 2022, newsrooms have been grappling with both the promise and the peril posed by generative AI. But not every publisher is equally prepared to pursue these opportunities.

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After the Quake, Myanmar Journalists Still Feel Aftershocks

  • DW Akademie
  • Soe Soe Htoon

Amid government pressure and weak infrastructure, journalists in Myanmar struggle after a recent earthquake. A Nyo, a 30-year-old journalist from Mandalay, faces daily risks. Born in Sagaing, a conflict hotspot since the 2021 coup, she reports despite threats from the military junta and ongoing violence.

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A Scream, Not a Celebration: Why Meduza Broke Its Rules

  • Meduza

From April 26 to July 6, the Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien gallery in Berlin hosts “No,” an exhibition curated by Meduza that brings together artists and journalists to explore life and work in exile amid Russia’s war on Ukraine and repression at home. The launch featured a panel on censorship with Ukrainian writer Zhenia Berezhna and Meduza editor-in-chief Ivan Kolpakov.

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How Exiled Russian Media Continue Broadcasting

  • Global Voices
  • Daria Dergacheva

This article explores how Russian opposition media, forced into exile after the 2022 crackdown, continue reaching audiences through platforms like YouTube and VPNs. It highlights their growing dependence on viewer donations, the impact of lost international funding, and the ongoing struggle to sustain independent journalism under increasing pressure.

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