Free Expression & the Law

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

8068 articles
Link to: Venezuelan government likens reporting on shortages to “war propaganda”

Venezuelan government likens reporting on shortages to “war propaganda”

President Nicolás Maduro has criticized media coverage on shortages of household basics in Venezuela and the National Communications Commission has started an investigation into Globovisión’s reporting. He described the coverage as “war propaganda liable to spread panic among the public”.

Relatives of Syrian detainees who were arrested over participation in protests against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, wait in front of a police building in Damascus  on 24 October 2012, REUTERS/Khaled al- Hariri

Thousands of political detainees unlawfully held in Syrian prisons for speaking out against the regime

The Human Rights Watch campaign, Inside the Black Hole, tells the individual stories of 21 Syrians who have been detained by the government since the start of the Syrian uprising in 2011. Most have been detained solely for exercising their rights to free expression and peaceful assembly.

Link to: German writer banned entry to U.S. after criticising the country’s surveillance powers

German writer banned entry to U.S. after criticising the country’s surveillance powers

Bulgarian-German writer Ilija Trojanov, an outspoken critic of America’s controversial surveillance powers, was denied entry to the United States on 30 September. PEN American Center said that the ban “will hardly calm the anxiety our colleagues around the world are feeling about America’s electronic spying.”

The four-fingered-salute was first used by Egyptian masses wanting to remember the Rabaa Al-Adawiya protesters supporting ousted president Mohammed Morsi who were brutally dispersed by the military in Egypt on 14 August 2013, REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh

Three Jordanian activists jailed for distributing flyers associated with Morsi supporters

Three activists have been jailed in Al-Juwaydah prison and accused of ‘disturbing relations with a sister Arab nation, Egypt’ for allegedly distributing flyers imprinted with the logo of the Rabaa Al-Adawiya Mosque, where Morsi supporters had held a sit-in for weeks that was violently dispersed, resulting in hundreds of deaths.

Link to: Editor arrested in Nepal over Facebook post

Editor arrested in Nepal over Facebook post

District police in Kathmandu, Nepal have arrested the editor of a weekly over an accusation that he “assassinated the character” of a businessman in a Facebook post.

The Yale Law School courtyard, altopower/flickr

Brazilian journalist detained at Yale University

Claudia Trevisan, a correspondent for the Brazilian newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo, was arrested and held for five hours for alleged “trespassing” on Yale University while she tried to interview the chief justice of the Brazilian Supreme Court.

Link to: Bahrain sentences 50 activists to heavy prison terms on terrorism charges

Bahrain sentences 50 activists to heavy prison terms on terrorism charges

A Bahraini court sentenced 50 human rights defenders and activists to prison sentences ranging from 5 to 15 years, while simultaneously reducing the sentences of two police officers accused of torture.

Link to: India’s Right to Information act challenged by questions of privacy protection

India’s Right to Information act challenged by questions of privacy protection

As the Right to Information movement in India has matured over the last decade, serious questions of privacy protection have also started making their way into public discourse.

Link to: Freelance photographer and video reporter on intercepted Greenpeace vessel imprisoned in Russia

Freelance photographer and video reporter on intercepted Greenpeace vessel imprisoned in Russia

A court in Murmansk has ordered that Denis Sinyakov, a well-known Russian freelance photographer and video reporter Kieron Bryan, who were aboard a Greenpeace vessel intercepted in Russian Arctic waters on 19 September, be placed in preventive detention for two months.

Link to: Moroccan editor Ali Anouzla charged with terrorism

Moroccan editor Ali Anouzla charged with terrorism

Ali Anouzla was charged on 25 September 2013 with terrorism after posting an article containing a link to a video posted by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).

Link to: Leading Saudi journalist Wajeha Al-Huwaider at risk of imminent imprisonment

Leading Saudi journalist Wajeha Al-Huwaider at risk of imminent imprisonment

Leading Saudi Arabian writer and journalist Wajeha Al-Huwaider has been the subject of a sustained harassment campaign since May 2003, when she was banned from publishing in Saudi Arabia.

Supporters of India's main opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) women's wing, scatter rose petals in front of a portrait of slain author Sushmita Banerjee, in Kolkata, 7 September 2013, REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhur

Indian diarist murdered in Afghanistan, mounting concern for writers’ safety

PEN International welcomes the police investigation into the shocking murder of Indian diarist Sushmita Banerjee in Afghanistan; however, the organisation expresses its mounting concern over the escalating pattern of attacks on writers and journalists in the country.

Link to: Minority rights activist gets 5-year jail sentence in Azerbaijan

Minority rights activist gets 5-year jail sentence in Azerbaijan

Human rights observers believe that Hilal Mammadov is being punished for his journalism and activism for national minorities’ rights.

Link to: Journalists in Egypt increasingly being targeted for their work

Journalists in Egypt increasingly being targeted for their work

Journalists in Egypt are increasingly being targeted for their opinions, their coverage of certain protests, and their affiliations.

Link to: Shaking off the fear of state censorship in Singapore – youth hold out hope

Shaking off the fear of state censorship in Singapore – youth hold out hope

An exploration of the views of Singaporeans and media professionals on free speech in a country known for its heavy-handed treatment of public criticism of government policy.

Link to: Egypt’s constitutional reforms should ensure free press

Egypt’s constitutional reforms should ensure free press

On 8 September, a 50-member constitutional committee in Egypt began work on amending Egypt’s 2012 constitution. The Committee to Protect Journalists wrote a letter to the president of the committee in Cairo urging him to adopt reforms that will guarantee all Egyptians freedom of speech and the right to information.