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Building a Pro-Democracy Media for Vietnam in Exile

  • New Bloom
  • Brian Hioe

The article features an interview with Trịnh Hữu Long, a Vietnamese journalist living in exile in Taiwan. Long explains that he has spent the past nine years introducing himself as “from Vietnam, but based in Taiwan,” where he now considers home. He co-founded and works for the independent magazines Luật Khoa and The Vietnamese.

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Vietnamese Government Sues Berlin-Based Exiled Journalists

  • Deutschlandfunk
  • Sebastian Engelbrecht

This episode of the mediares podcast takes a closer look at the case in which the Vietnamese government is suing Berlin-based exile journalists. Sebastian Engelbrecht discusses the political background, the implications for press freedom, and what this cross-border legal action means for journalists living in exile.

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Sexual Violence Against Zimbabwean Exiled Journalist

  • Law and Democracy Support Foundation (LDSF)

Law and Democracy Support Foundation (LDSF) strongly condemns the sexual and physical assaults, threats, and surveillance targeting the exiled journalist Sophia Tekwani and her family in Sweden, as part of a dangerous pattern of transnational repression by Zimbabwean authorities.

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Casualty of War: Sudan’s Media Emergency

  • Nieman Reports
  • Meera Selva

Sudan’s ongoing war has upended the country’s nascent and burgeoning digital media scene and created a chaotic, polarized information space. The Sudanese journalists who continue to report on the conflict, including the recent wave of killings in El Fasher, risk the most extreme consequences.

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Journalism In Exile: Reporting Away From Home

  • Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN)
  • Neha Banka

Geographic barriers, constant surveillance, and restricted access to their home countries are just some of the challenges faced by investigative journalists living in exile. How to continue reporting from a distance is one part of the story; how to figure out the basics of everyday life in a new country while continuing to do this journalism is perhaps less discussed.

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A Syrian Photographer Trapped by The Laws That Saved Her

  • Coda
  • Sara Kontar & Nadia Beard

Syria’s nearly 14-year-long civil war has changed shape. Though there is still fighting and instability, the political transition means many who fled are beginning to return home. Yet for Sara Kontar, a Syrian photographer who has lived in France for nearly a decade, return remains impossible.

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Exiled Journalists Confront Entrenched Authoritarianism

  • LatAm Journalism Review (LJR)
  • Teresa Mioli

Repression forced journalists to flee their countries, but even from exile three journalists remain committed to reporting what’s happening back home. They shared their stories with an online crowd of almost 200 people in a panel held on Nov. 18 by the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas.

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Attacked and Silenced: How Journalists Fight for Truth

  • EU NEIGHBOURS east
  • Olga Konsevych

The article describes how journalists across Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia, Moldova, Azerbaijan and Belarus face imprisonment, violence, digital surveillance and disinformation while continuing to report on war, corruption and democracy. It also highlights the urgent need for stronger protections, sustainable media models, and cross-border cooperation to safeguard press freedom in the Eastern Partnership region.

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Aliaksandr Klaskouski: “Journalism is Not Just a Craft.”

  • BAJ

The collection tells the story of the laureates of the “Voice of the Freedom Generation” award, founded by the Belarusian PEN in partnership with the Human Rights Center “Viasna”, the Belarusian Association of Journalists, Press Club Belarus and Free Press for Eastern Europe endowment fund.

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Exiled Latin American Journalists Speak on Repression

  • LatAm Journalism Review (LJR)
  • Teresa Mioli

As part of the University of Texas at Austin’s International Education Week, leading journalists from three of the most affected countries will share their experiences of reporting in exile as part of a special virtual panel organized by the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas.

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The Last Bastion of Freedom of Expression in Nicaragua

  • EL PAÍS
  • Wilfredo Miranda Aburto

Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo have extended the censorship imposed by their co-presidential regime to the internet. This effectively closes off the last remaining bastion of freedom of expression and of the press in Nicaragua for dissenting voices.

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“After all, we survived.”

  • FAZ
  • Julian Staib

She didn’t want to go into exile, but she had no choice: journalist Mascha Borzunova had to flee Russia. In Hamburg, exiled journalists from Russia, Egypt and Afghanistan describe their situation, pursued even in Germany. “At least we survived and still have readers in Russia,” says Katerina Abramova of Meduza.

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Interpol Rejects Kyrgyzstan’s Request For Arrest of Journalist

  • OCCRP

Interpol has rejected a request from Kyrgyz authorities to issue an international warrant for the co-founder of one of the country’s leading independent media outlets, calling the request politically motivated. OCCRP learned Thursday that Kyrgyzstan had asked Interpol to issue a so-called Red Notice for Rinat Tuhvatshin, the co-founder of Kloop, an award-winning outlet.

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How Georgian Dream Is Drying Out Independent Online Media

  • Civil.ge
  • Lea Eichhorn

While independent online media outlets lost most of their funds due to current legislation, Georgia’s ruling party is said to be spending millions on favorable media organizations. In recent months, dozens of NGOs and media organizations have been subjected to inspections under the new laws, while many others have been forced to scale back or suspend their activities to avoid punitive consequences.

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Attacks on Journalists in Latin America Decline but Exile Rises

  • LatAm Journalism Review (LJR)
  • Silvia Higuera

“In 2024, journalism in Latin America faced one of its most hostile environments in decades.” That’s the conclusion of the annual report from Voces del Sur, a coalition of 17 groups from across Latin America that promote freedom of expression and the protection of journalists.

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Sudanese Exiled Filmmakers Found New Way to Tell the Story

  • Reuters Institute
  • Maurice Oniang’o

When war broke out in Sudan in April 2023, a group of young Sudanese filmmakers were forced into exile. They also had to rethink their film. Khartoum (2025) had started out a year earlier as a collection of quiet observational sketches of ordinary lives in the capital. Now, it had to be reimagined as both the storytellers and their subjects scattered across borders.

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Authoritarians Silence Press Across Latin America

  • De Último Minuto
  • Carolina Alvarez

On the second day of the 81st General Assembly of the Inter American Press Association (IAPA), the panel titled “Anatomy of Authoritarian Advance: Handbook of Tactics and Their Effect on the Media” was held, in which the strategies of authoritarian regimes to weaken press freedom in the region were presented.

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Journalism is Under Fire in Sudan’s Civil War

  • The Canary
  • Alex/Rose Cocker

The civil war in Sudan has displaced over 13 million people. It’s left more than 30 million in need of aid, of which just under 25 million are undergoing acute hunger. Within the vast scope of this humanitarian crisis, journalists on the ground in Sudan are being killed or displaced. This, in turn, is limiting the vital flow of information both inside and out of the country.

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