Dear reader,
There is a war on journalists raging across the world. Last year, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) recorded the highest number of media workers killed for doing their jobs since it began collecting data three decades ago.
According to their data, at least 124 journalists and media workers were killed in 2024 – nearly two-thirds of them Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in Gaza and the West Bank.
Journalists were also killed while doing their jobs in Sudan, Pakistan, Mexico, Syria, Myanmar, Iraq and Haiti. Hundreds more were detained and imprisoned across the world, while multiple others were harassed, assaulted and faced relentless threats and abuse online, as well as in their communities and places of work.
Attacks on press freedom and independent news outlets by governments and authoritarian regimes from Russia to Turkey to Belarus are also rising, along with the tsunami of misinformation that is being disseminated on social media and across the internet.
In the US, Donald Trump labelled journalists the “enemies of the people” in his first term, and now he is waging lawsuits against major news organisations and ordering federal investigations against others.
Today, as we mark World Press Freedom Day, we are reporting on the vital fight to maintain a free and independent global media.
In my job as the editor of the Guardian’s Rights and Freedom series, I work closely with journalists across the world operating in increasingly fraught and frightening environments. Support the Guardian's independent global journalism |