CPJ gala honors five journalists and sets fundraising record Malaysia PM urges fair pay for journalists amid low wages Kashmir Times raid draws concern over media pressure Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions Samoa PM bars Samoa Observer in escalating media dispute Asia sees rising press freedom risks amid China-style controls Thai indictment of journalist sparks cross-border press freedom concerns Thai court indicts Australian journalist over defamation New study shows alarming decline in press freedom in Pakistan Shahzeb Khanzada faces lawsuit threat in Canada over video CPJ gala honors five journalists and sets fundraising record Malaysia PM urges fair pay for journalists amid low wages Kashmir Times raid draws concern over media pressure Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions Samoa PM bars Samoa Observer in escalating media dispute Asia sees rising press freedom risks amid China-style controls Thai indictment of journalist sparks cross-border press freedom concerns Thai court indicts Australian journalist over defamation New study shows alarming decline in press freedom in Pakistan Shahzeb Khanzada faces lawsuit threat in Canada over video
Logo
Janu
Pranks and newsroom tales

CPJ announces International Press Freedom Awards winners

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 10 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

CPJ announces International Press Freedom Awards winners

NEW YORK: The Committee to Protect Journalists will honor journalists from Ethiopia, Malaysia, Paraguay, and Syria with the 2015 International Press Freedom Awards. The journalists have endured death threats, physical attacks, legal action, imprisonment, or exile in the course of their work.

The 2015 awardees are: Zone 9 bloggers of Ethiopia, a group of bloggers of which six were arrested, imprisoned, and charged with terrorism in retaliation for critical reporting;

Zulkiflee Anwar Ulhaque, "Zunar," (pictured) of Malaysia, CPJ's first cartoonist awardee, who is charged with sedition and faces a potential 43-year jail term for drawings lampooning high-level abuse in the Malaysian government;

Cándido Figueredo Ruíz, a Paraguayan journalist who faces death threats and has lived under 24-hour police protection for the past decade because of his reporting on drug smuggling on the Brazil-Paraguay border; and

Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, a Syrian citizen journalist collective and one of the few independent news sources that continues to report from inside the Islamic State's self-proclaimed capital.

"In a very dangerous period for journalists, these awardees have braved threats from repressive governments, drug cartels, and Islamic State," said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. "Whether through blogs or traditional media outlets, or by drawing cartoons, they risk their personal safety and freedom to bring us the news."

The Associated Press's special regional correspondent for Pakistan and Afghanistan, Kathy Gannon, will receive the Burton Benjamin Memorial Award for lifetime achievement in the cause of press freedom. Gannon has covered the region for the AP as a correspondent and bureau chief since 1988. In 2001, Gannon was the only Western journalist allowed by the Taliban to return to Kabul during the U.S.-led coalition's assault on Afghanistan. In 2005, Gannon authored I is for Infidel: From Holy War, to Holy Terror, 18 Years Inside Afghanistan, an examination of the Taliban and post-Taliban period, published by Public Affairs.

"Kathy Gannon has reported in South Central Asia for 18 years, through periods of extensive political turmoil and conflict," said Sandra Mims Rowe, chairman of CPJ's board of directors. "Her commitment to journalism has transcended personal risk and tragedy, including the loss of her colleague Anja Niedringhaus. Gannon is widely known as one of the most thoughtful and dedicated journalists covering the region."

All of the winners will be honored at CPJ's annual award and benefit dinner in New York City on November 24, 2015. David Muir, anchor of ABC World News Tonight, will host the event. Steven R. Swartz, president and chief executive officer of Hearst, is the dinner chairman. - CPJ

 

Read Next

Shahzeb Khanzada, Shahbaz Gill clash intensifies on X

Shahzeb Khanzada, Shahbaz Gill clash intensifies on X

 November 17, 2025: A heated exchange between Shahzeb Khanzada and Shahbaz Gill on X escalates after a viral mall confrontation involving a member of the public, underscoring rising hostility and polarization in Pakistan’s media sphere.

Newsroom
CPJ gala honors five journalists and sets fundraising record

CPJ gala honors five journalists and sets fundraising record

 November 21, 2025 CPJ honored five courageous journalists at its 2025 Press Freedom Awards in New York, raising a record $2.925 million to support global reporting under threat.


Malaysia PM urges fair pay for journalists amid low wages

Malaysia PM urges fair pay for journalists amid low wages

 November 21, 2025 Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim urges fair pay for journalists, highlighting low wages and promising government action to improve media workers’ financial conditions


Kashmir Times raid draws concern over media pressure

Kashmir Times raid draws concern over media pressure

 November 21, 2025 CPJ urges authorities in Jammu and Kashmir to return seized Kashmir Times property and clarify the legal basis for a newsroom raid that raises fresh press freedom concerns.


Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions

Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions

 November 21, 2025 Tunisian journalists protest rising media restrictions, warning of growing pressure as work permit bans, delays, and prosecutions intensify concerns over press freedom.


Samoa PM bars Samoa Observer in escalating media dispute

Samoa PM bars Samoa Observer in escalating media dispute

 November 20, 2025 Samoa’s prime minister has barred the Samoa Observer from Cabinet briefings, sparking condemnation from journalists and regional media groups over rising threats to press independence.


Popular Stories