There were 10 incidents in Ukraine in September 2019 recorded by Index’s monitoring project.
CATEGORY: Ukraine
Ukraine: Press freedom violations August 2019
There were 9 incidents in Ukraine in July 2019 recorded by Index’s monitoring project.
Ukraine: Press freedom violations July 2019
There were 9 incidents in Ukraine in July 2019 recorded by Index’s monitoring project.
In Ukraine, violence is the tool of choice against journalists
This report looks at physical assaults that Index on Censorship’s Monitoring and Advocating for Media Freedom project classified as threats, limitations or violations of press freedom in Ukraine between 1 February 2019 and 30 June 2019.
Ukraine: Press freedom violations June 2019
There were 6 incidents in Ukraine in June 2019 recorded by Index’s monitoring project.
Turkey, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, and Russia among Europe’s most flagrant offenders of media freedom in 2018
In 2018, 17 alerts were submitted to the Council of Europe’s Platform to promote the protection of journalism and safety of journalists relating to impunity for murders of journalists.
Ukraine: Press freedom violations April 2019
There were 5 incidents in Ukraine in April 2019 recorded by Index’s monitoring project.
Ukrainian investigative journalism on the eve of the presidential election
Prominent journalists face an increasing pressure from both wealthy oligarchs and corrupt officials
No impunity: Who killed journalist Pavel Shemeret?
Before his death, Pavel Sheremet was one of Ukraine’s leading investigative journalists. He most notably investigated government corruption and border smuggling in his native Belarus, leading to his arrest in 1997 but winning him CPJ’s International Press Freedom Award in the process. He was detained, harassed and arrested because of his work. Then, in 2016, he was assassinated. And Ukrainian authorities still have not uncovered who’s to blame.
Illiberal democracies: Awash in media without plurality
Visitors to Eurasian countries — Turkey, Russia, Ukraine or, to a lesser extent, Azerbaijan — might be impressed by the sheer number of domestic television channels that offer news programming. But all the coverage doesn’t translate into media plurality.
What does it take for a journalist to enter Crimea?
There’s currently no good way for journalists to travel to Crimea. Rather, it’s a balancing act where one has to choose the least bad solution
Ukraine: Authorities block journalists as threats to national security
The current conflict has led to a rise in anti-media sentiments across Ukraine