Free Expression & the Law

When legislation and the judicial system affect your right to express yourself.

8663 articles

Colombia’s president to create direct communication channel with RSF and FLIP on cases of violence against journalists

“It is very positive that President Petro is directly involving his office in addressing serious attacks against media professionals. This will allow the state to respond quickly to save lives and will send a clear message to assailants across the country about the fight against impunity for violence against journalists.”

Political prisoners, censorship in libraries, and four years of repression

August 2024 in Europe and Central Asia: A free expression round-up produced by IFEX’s Regional Editor Cathal Sheerin, based on IFEX member reports and news from the region.

Turkey: Press freedom and freedom of expression groups condemn court decision upholding prison sentence for journalist Bülent Mumay

Mumay’s case is not an isolated incident but part of a broader pattern of judicial harassment and censorship targeting Turkey’s independent media. It highlights the urgent need for international attention to protect press freedom and the public’s right to information.

CPJ urges Mongolia not to contest investigative journalist’s appeal against conviction

The journalist was sentenced to four years and nine months in prison on various charges.

Russia: Life for queer people after ban on LGBTQI+ “movement”

“Ayan believes the ban on LGBTQI+ people is intended to ‘remove people from the information field, to make them completely invisible.’ And you can do whatever you want to the invisible.”

Australia: Queensland shield laws will enhance right to know

Shield laws allow journalists to claim legal privilege in order to protect a confidential source.

At least 55 governments have used mobility controls against dissidents in the last decade

Authoritarians use a variety of travel restrictions to make life harder for dissidents at home and in exile. Democratic countries that host exiles can do more to defend their freedom of movement and ensure their safety.

Bahrain must restore rights in Jau prison amid prisoner protests

“Various restrictions imposed on prisoners’ movements and, most recently, the interruption of communications with families must end,” said UN experts.

Iran: Alarming surge in executions

87 executions reported after June’s presidential elections, including 29 in one day.

Palestinian youth face alarming digital security threats

A new study from 7amleh reveals how online harassment and cyber surveillance of young Palestinians has sparked a chilling rise in self-censorship.

Venezuela: RSF counts 70 violations of press freedom in 15 days

Both national and foreign journalists face a climate of hostility and repression, marked by arbitrary arrests, threats, physical attacks, censorship and restrictions on information access. RSF strongly condemns these violations and demands immediate restoration of journalists’ rights.

Journalist Floriane Irangabiye freed following presidential pardon

The media fraternity celebrates the early release of Floriane Irangabiye after she is granted full remission of the sentences handed down against her.

CIPESA unpacks the concerns around critical principles of data governance

Safety, security, accuracy, reliability and confidentiality of personal information remain at the top of the priority list of African countries working on improving their data governance frameworks.

Eswatini’s Supreme Court retains repressive provisions of terrorism laws

By overturning a High Court decision declaring several provisions of the country’s two terrorism laws invalid, eSwatini’s judiciary is reinforcing the authorities’ tendency to rule by tyranny.

Georgia: Accountability needed for violent attacks on government critics

“A pattern of harassment and intimidation of activists, independent media, and government critics, if left unpunished, risks emboldening malicious actors to escalate violence in the months before Georgia’s upcoming elections” – HRW

Spain: Media freedom coalition calls for end to repressive “Gag Law”

“Democratic regeneration” reforms proposed by PM Sánchez fail to address the urgent need to repeal the infamous Citizen Security law, nicknamed the “Gag Law”.