Censorship

Direct and indirect suppression of speech, books, music and other materials considered morally, politically or otherwise objectionable.

4015 articles
Khadija Ismayilova, center, speaks to journalists right after her release in Baku, Azerbaijan, 25 May 2016, AP Photo/ Aziz Karimov

The other travel ban

David Kaye on why a growing number of governments are putting travel bans on critics to stop them from discussing state repression and corruption.

Journalists work in the press workroom as now deposed Catalan President Carles Puigdemont addresses the Catalan parliament in Barcelona, Spain, 10 October 2017 , AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti

Catalonia’s alarming free expression climate

As the regional election draws near, concerns grow over reports of unprecedented levels of harassment and violence against journalists.

Leaders, back row from left, Russian President Vladimir Putin, U.S. President Donald Trump, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, front row from left, Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang, Indonesian President Joko Widodo, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pose during the APEC Summit in Danang, Vietnam, 11 November 2017, AP Photo/Hau Dinh

Trump abandons commitment to press freedom abroad

President Trump’s trip to Asia demonstrates a declining US willingness to defend press freedom in its bilateral and multilateral relationships with other countries.

A Rohingya Muslim man carries a sack of rice as he makes his way through Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh, 19 November 2017, AP Photo/Wong Maye-E

Six times Facebook ignored its own community standards

Is Facebook disproportionately targeting marginalised communities? Critics point to these six instances to show that may just be the case.

Speaker of the State Duma, Vyacheslav Volodin, top, gestures while speaking to lawmaker Leonid Levin, right, and Deputy Speaker Pyotr Tolstoy, with his back to the camera, during the session when the "foreign agent law" was passed in Moscow, Russia, 15 November 2017, AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko

Russia retaliates after RT forced to register as “foreign agent” in US

Just two days after news channel RT had to register as a “foreign agent” in the US, the Duma hastily passed a law allowing Russian authorities to declare any foreign media a “foreign agent.”

View of the Kremlin from Bolshoy Kammeny Bridge, Moscow, Russia, 9 May 2011, Flickr/Alexandergusev (Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0)

Implementation of the Kremlin’s law on “undesirable organisations” reaching farcical proportions

A court in Moscow fined the Andrei Rylkov Foundation group for involvement with an “undesirable organisation”. The charges stem from a 2011 hyperlink on the group’s website to a publication on the website of the Open Society Foundations (OSF), which Russian authorities banned two years ago.

REUTERS/Adnan Abidi

Indian cartoonist Bala G arrested for caricature of Tamil Nadu chief

Cartoonist Bala G is accused of “obscene representation” for drawing a caricature of a chief minister that brings attention to a family’s self-immolation.

Pakistani journalists holding an image of their colleague, Ahmed Noorani, condemn the attack on Noorani, in Karachi, Pakistan, 30 October 2017, AP Photo/Shakil Adil

For Pakistan’s unprotected and threatened journalists, can new legislation make a difference?

Despite the government’s promises of new legislation aimed at protecting journalists, groups that have been lobbying for journalist safety in Pakistan are worried that the bill fails to address the scale, context, and complexity of impunity for crimes against journalists and media workers.

Journalists raise their hands as they wait to be called on to ask a question to President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, in the Rose Garden of the White House, 16 October 2017, AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Does Donald Trump see himself as a media mogul?

Since he was elected US president, Donald Trump has not let a week go by without meddling in the decisions of the US media.

A woman sells airtime for mobile phones in Zimbabwe, Kay McGowan, USAID/Creative Commons license: http://bit.ly/RaejCi

Peace through pluralism, a ‘Minister of WhatsApp,’ and Tanzania’s big panic: October in Africa

Alice Nderitu, Zimbabwe’s clampdown on social media, newspaper shutdowns in Tanzania, Cameroon journalists released and more in our October round-up of news from Africa.

Union members of the KBS (Korea Broadcasting Service) stage a rally against the government at the KBS headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, 29 May 2014, AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon

Korean public broadcast journalists strike for editorial independence

About 3,000 journalists at South Korea’s public broadcasters have been on strike since September demanding editorial independence.

RSF/Forbidden Stories

“Forbidden Stories”: Keeping the work of threatened journalists alive

Forbidden Stories, a project that secures the data and information of threatened journalists, aims to continue the work of investigative reporters, even after they have been imprisoned or killed.

Tonga's Prime Minister Samuela Akilisi Pohiva addresses the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters, 24 September 2016, AP Photo/Jason DeCrow

Tonga Broadcasting Commission shakeup raises concerns

Two senior editors of the Tonga Broadcasting Commission who previously clashed with the prime minister were transferred to the sales department.

A girl holds a lit candle during a ceremony of interfaith praying in Yangon, Burma, 17 October 2017, REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun

Burma’s draft Interfaith Harmonious Coexistence Bill continues to endanger fundamental rights

According to ARTICLE 19, the draft bill adopts a very broad definition of “hate speech” and relies entirely upon the criminal law and coercive measures.

banner in Chinese which reads "Hong Kong Independence" is displayed at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in Hong Kong, 8 September 2017, REUTERS/Bobby Yip

Speaking of independence is getting harder for Hong Kongers

Beijing has been more forcefully asserting its influence over Hong Kong. In September, the leaders of 10 universities in Hong Kong condemned “abuses” of free speech on campuses.

Mauritanians queue to vote in a referendum on whether to amend their constitution in the capital Nouakchott, 25 June 2006, REUTERS/Jon Shadid

Mauritania cracks down on critical press after referendum

The Mauritanian Radio and Television Broadcast Authority ordered Mauritania’s five privately owned news stations to shut down for “failing to fulfil their financial agreements” with the country’s broadcast regulator.