One Free Press Coalition's '10 Most Urgent' list, August 2021

In advance of World Photography Day on Aug. 19, the monthly 10 Most Urgent list focuses on cases of photographers, filmmakers and video journalists who have been targeted for their work.

Photojournalists experience a unique set of challenges, as the nature of their work requires that they get direct access to their subjects. In a 2018 global survey of photojournalists, 90 percent of respondents told CPJ that they have had to work in high-risk environments, and almost half had been injured at least once while working. In 2020, CPJ documented 20 photojournalists behind bars, and since 1992, 366 photographers, camera operators and documentary filmmakers have been killed in connection to their work.

Journalists can find safety resources and information on CPJ and IWMF websites.

1. Anton Hammerl (Libya)

Anton Hammerl
South African photojournalist Anton Hammerl. (Jerome Delay/AP)

Hammerl, a photographer of South African and Austrian descent, was shot and killed by government forces in Libya in 2011 while covering the frontlines of the conflict as a freelancer. Ten years on, his body has still not been returned to his family, and there has been no formal investigation into his death. A Justice for Anton campaign is seeking to change this.

2. Olivier Dubois (Mali)

Olivier Dubois
Olivier Dubois. (CPJ)

French journalist and filmmaker Olivier Dubois was kidnapped in the Malian region of Gao in April by the al-Qaida-affiliated group Jamaa Nusrat al-Islam while seeking an interview with a local leader of the group. Months later, he remains in their custody.

3. Lekso Lashkarava (Georgia)

Lekso Lashkarava
The coffin holding TV Pirveli journalist Lekso Lashkarava is carried by supporters. (David Mdzinarishvili\TASS via Getty Images)

TV Pirveli camera operator Lekso Lashkarava died in Tbilisi, Georgia, days after he sustained a concussion and broken bones in his face, and underwent surgery as a result of an attack by anti-LGBTQ protestors while covering a demonstration in the capital. Police have launched a criminal investigation into his death.

4. Danish Siddiqui (Afghanistan)

Reuters photojournalist Danish Siddiqui
Reuters photojournalist Danish Siddiqui. (Debarchan Chatterjee/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Reuters photojournalist Danish Siddiqui, who won a 2018 Pulitzer Prize for his work documenting the Rohingya refugee crisis, was killed in July while covering a clash between Afghan security forces and Taliban fighters. Fifty-three journalists have been killed in Afghanistan since 1992.

5. Qaraman Shukri (Iraq)

Iraqi Kurdish photojournalist Qaraman Shukri sentenced to seven years in prison in a secret trial without a lawyer present. He and his family hope to appeal. Shukri did not say what laws he was convicted of violating during the trial.

6. Alex Silveira (Brazil)

Alex Silveira
Photojournalist Alex Silveira. (Facebook)

Brazilian photojournalist was shot in the eye with a rubber bullet by police in 2000 while covering protests in São Paulo, blinding him in his left eye. He has been fighting for justice ever since, and while the supreme court recently ruled in his favor, he still awaits a final decision.

7. Sayed Abd Ellah (Egypt)

Freelance photographer and commentator Sayed Abd Ellah is one of several journalists detained since 2019 in Egypt, pending a mass trial in which thousands of people were charged with false news and anti-state crimes, and his pretrial detention has been repeatedly renewed over the years.

8. Nooshin Jafari (Iran)

Nooshin Jafari
Photographer Nooshin Jafari. (via Twitter)

Cinema and theater photographer Nooshin Jafari, who covers culture for several Iranian magazines, was arrested in 2019 related to posts on Twitter. She started serving her four-year prison sentence this year on charges of “spreading anti-establishment propaganda” and “insulting sanctities.”

9. Bülent Kılıç (Turkey)

Bülent Kiliç
AFP photographer Bülent Kiliç, center. (Yasin Akgul/AFP via Getty Images)

On June 28, police officers in Istanbul detained Bülent Kiliç, the chief Turkey photographer for AFP while he was covering police breaking up an LGBTQ Pride march in the city. Officers hit him in the face with his camera and threw it to the ground, then pinned him down by kneeling on his neck and back as he struggled to breathe, before releasing him.

10. Magnificent Mndebele and Cebelihle Mbuyisa (Eswatini)

Magnificent Mndebele (left) and Cebelihle Mbuyisa (right) (Magnificent Mndebele via Twitter, Cebelihle Mbuyisa)
Magnificent Mndebele (left) and Cebelihle Mbuyisa (right) (Magnificent Mndebele via Twitter, Cebelihle Mbuyisa)

After covering the funeral of a police shooting victim, soldiers arrested Magnificent Mndebele and Cebelihle Mbuyisa, reporters from the South African news website New Frame in July. Soldiers threatened them at gunpoint, demanded they delete their camera footage, and took them to the police station where they were interrogated and physically abused by police for hours before being released.

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