One Free Press Coalition's '10 Most Urgent' list, February 2020

Arash Shoa Shargh. (Iran Human Rights Monitor)
Arash Shoa-Shargh. (Iran Human Rights Monitor)

Yahoo News is a member of the One Free Press Coalition and is publishing the group’s latest “10 Most Urgent” list below to highlight the increasingly dangerous climate for journalism and free expression around the world in an effort to roll back repressive anti-press policies.

1. Arash Shoa-Shargh (Iran)

Case of imprisoned journalist serving 10 years shrouded in silence.

Arash Shoa-Shargh, an Iranian journalist living in exile in Turkey and working for popular antigovernment news channel Amad News, was arrested and sentenced in 2018 to 10 years in prison on charges of “insulting the Supreme Leader,” “acting against national security,” “encouraging the public to misconduct” and “spreading corruption on the land of God.” Friends have said authorities pressure the journalist’s family to not publicize the case, while detention in a rural prison has made it difficult to access information on his current status.

2. Aleksandr Valov (Russia)

Russian editor held in Irkutsk punishment cell without just cause.

Aleksandr Valov, the editor in chief and founder of local news site BlogSochi, was placed in solitary confinement in December and held in close supervision because of anticipated retaliation and disagreement with the court’s verdict. He was arrested in January 2018 and sentenced to six years on trumped-up extortion charges. Valov captured and narrated a video live stream of his arrest as police broke his door, cut off the electricity and beat him.

3. Samuel Wazizi (Cameroon)

Arrested journalist’s charge and location unknown for more than five months.

The whereabouts of Cameroonian journalist Samuel Wazizi (whose legal name is Samuel Ajiekah Abuwe) are unknown ever since he was transferred from police to military custody in August. He has been denied access to his lawyers, family and friends and held on undisclosed charges that police say are related to the country’s Anglophone armed conflict. The country has at least seven journalists held in prison as of Dec. 1, 2019.

4. Azory Gwanda (Tanzania)

No updates after journalist’s disappearance more than two years ago.

Azory Gwanda has been missing since Nov. 21, 2017. The freelance journalist was investigating mysterious killings in rural Tanzania when he “disappeared and died,” as Foreign Minister Palamagamba Kabudi said in an interview in July 2019. However, the official backtracked amid requests for clarification, and the government has failed to conduct an investigation or disclose information.

5. Azimjon Askarov (Kyrgyzstan)

Imprisoned journalist’s health deteriorating after nine years of life sentence.

In July, a Kyrgyz court upheld the life sentence of award-winning journalist Azimjon Askarov, despite persistent international condemnation. The ethnic Uzbek is the only journalist imprisoned in the country and has been held nine years on trumped-up charges for reporting on human rights violations. Letters home detail his deteriorating health, limited access to medication and prison officials punishing detainees after visiting days.

6. Lu Yuyu (China)

Imprisoned journalist has requested and been denied help for severe depression.

Prison guards have denied medical treatment for reporter Lu Yuyu, diagnosed with severe depression during his four-year prison sentence commenced in August 2017. He and his partner were arrested in Dali in China’s Yunnan province on suspicion of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble” for publishing photos, videos and text on topics including corruption protests and environmental pollution. The court maintained its decision in 2017, and Lu is currently lodging a second appeal.

7. Luz Escobar (Cuba)

Cuban authorities barricade independent journalist inside her home.

Since November 2019, Cuban authorities have repeatedly barred Luz Escobar from leaving her Havana home. The reporter for the independent Cuban news website 14yMedio says authorities often prevent independent journalists from working on “significant dates” either by detaining them or threatening detention if they exit their homes. A security agent was stationed outside Escobar’s door multiple times last year, including on the anniversary of Fidel Castro’s death and on international Human Rights Day.

8. Jamal Khashoggi (Saudi Arabia)

Demands for answers in Khashoggi murder persist into new decade.

In December 2019, Saudi Arabia sentenced eight individuals in connection with the brazen killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018. What the kingdom may have considered resolution and closure for the high-profile case, CPJ called a “sham trial” and “mockery of justice.” Calls remain for the U.S. and the U.N. to conduct an independent criminal investigation and probe the Saudi crown prince’s role in the “extrajudicial killing.”

9. Patricia Kayuni (Malawi)

Authorities fail to protect journalist from protesters’ assault.

Protesters beat and attempted to tear clothing off Tuntufye FM reporter Patricia Kayuni on Jan. 10 while she covered a demonstration in Chitipa, in northern Malawi. No arrests have been made against attackers who believed Kayuni was a police officer sent to photograph demonstrators. The same week, authorities in Malawi detained and charged three journalists seeking to cover the EU delegation’s return.

10. Solafa Magdy, Hossam El-Sayyad and Mohamed Salah (Egypt)

Three journalists await sentencing on charges of membership in a banned group and disseminating false news.

In November 2019, plainclothes Egyptian security forces arrested freelance journalists Solafa Magdy and her husband, Hossam El-Sayyad, at a cafe in the Dokki area of Giza, as well as freelancer and blogger Mohamed Salah. The officers confiscated their mobile phones and car keys and beat Magdy for refusing to unlock her phone. A state security prosecutor delivered charges of membership in a banned group and disseminating false news. Magdy is experiencing health issues in pretrial detention, ahead of a Feb. 4 hearing.