Share the post "CPJ To Honor Four Courageous Journalists 2021 International Press Freedom Awards"
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has announced it will honor four courageous journalists from Belarus, Guatemala, Mozambique, and Myanmar with the 2021 International Press Freedom Awards.
In a statement, it said all four have reported during a historically turbulent time, covering protests and political upheaval in their countries.
“In the midst of a battle over the control of information, these journalists are on the side of the people, covering events, informing communities, and ensuring accountability,” said Joel Simon, CPJ executive director. “They have paid a price, confronting violence, harassment, repression, and persecution but refusing to back down. We honor their commitment and sacrifice and look forward to celebrating their courage, alongside all those who stand firm for press freedom and independent journalism,” read the statement.
The awardees are Belarusian, Katsiaryna Barysevich who is a staff correspondent for the influential news outlet Tut.by, where she covers legal and social issues.
In 2020, Barysevich was reporting on pro-democracy protests in the country and published a story about a protester allegedly killed by law enforcement, contradicting authorities’ official statements. As a result, she spent six months behind bars and face fines. Her colleagues at Tut.by continue to face detentions and harassment.
Anastasia Mejía of Guatemala is a radio journalist based in Joyabaj, a town in the central Guatemalan department of Quiché. She co-founded Xolabaj Radio and Xolabaj TV to cover issues of importance for the local community, particularly topics of concern to Indigenous women.
In September 2020, police arrested Mejía on criminal charges connected to her coverage of local demonstrations, and she was held in pre-trial detention for five weeks before being released on house arrest. Today, her journalistic work is severely restricted.
Mozambican Matías Guente is the executive editor of Canal de Moçambique, an independent weekly investigative newspaper, and its daily digital publication CanalMoz.
According to the CPJ, over the years, he has faced a myriad of threats for his hard-hitting reporting, including police interrogations, charges of violation of state secrecy and conspiracy against the state, and attempted kidnapping in 2019. In 2020, unidentified individuals set the outlet’s offices ablaze.
Aye Chan Naing of Myanmar is co-founder, chief editor, and executive director of the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), an independent broadcast media group in Myanmar.
As a pioneer in Myanmar’s exile media movement starting in the 1990s, he led DVB’s transition from exile-based to in-country operations in 2012, despite continued harassment from the government. In 2021, multiple DVB journalists were arrested or detained amid a harsh crackdown on media and civil society following the military junta’s takeover in February.
“The winners will be honored on November 18, 2021, at CPJ’s annual awards ceremony, to be chaired this year by Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation, and hosted by ABC “World News Tonight” anchor David Muir. Due to health and safety considerations related to COVID-19, this year’s gala will be a hybrid virtual and in-person event,” the release said.