CPJ calls on new Syrian leaders to protect journalist safety, hold Assad’s media persecutors to account

Giornalista ucciso in siria

On December 8, Bashar al-Assad’s repressive regime in Syria came to an end. Scenes of journalists rushing to cover a post-Assad era surfaced, raising hope for the start of a new chapter for the country’s media workers.

Syria has long been one of the world’s deadliest and riskiest areas for journalists; just four days prior to Assad fleeing the country, award-winning Syrian photojournalist Anas Alkharboutli was killed near Hama by a government airstrike.

As Syria transitions to a new government, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) calls on authorities to take decisive action to protect journalist safety, hold accountable those responsible for the killing, imprisonment, and silencing of members of the media during the country’s 13-year civil war, and to allow journalists and media workers safe access to information and locations to cover events, without risking being detained or questioned for their work.

So far, CPJ research shows:

One imprisoned journalist, Tal al-Mallohi, a Syrian blogger detained since 2009, has been released. The fate of other prisoners, including U.S. journalist Austin Tice — abducted in Syria in mid-August 2012 — remains unknown.

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Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)