Monday, August 05, 2024

PEN International condemns growing wave of repression against journalists

PEN International
5 August 2024



General view of the Nicaraguan Parliament during a session in Managua, 31 May 2022. STR/AFP via Getty Images

PEN International condemns the growing wave of repression against journalists in Nicaragua, highlighting the concerning rise in attacks and threats amidst a worsening human rights crisis.

This statement was originally published on pen-international.org on 26 July 2024.

‘Our global community will continue to highlight and denounce repressive actions against critical journalists, authors, and media outlets who are threatened and harassed for their work and critical thoughts. We call on the Nicaraguan authorities to put an immediate end to the persecution; attempting to silence the words will not silence the truth,’ said Burhan Sonmez, President of PEN International.

The Nicaraguan authorities must end its persecution of journalists, cultural workers, writers and media outlets in its efforts to silence them. PEN International has received reports that at the very least the homes of fifteen independent journalists were raided by police over the month of July. The whereabouts of at least three journalists remains unknown at the time of writing.

Since the beginning of 2024, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has observed an exponential increase in the use of various forms of harassment to intimidate independent journalists into silence, including arbitrary arrests, house visits commonly followed by daily summons to police stations, forced exile (frequently coupled with attempts to impede their return to the country), as well as the cancellation of the legal status of various independent media outlets.

Since the onset of 2024, at least 26 journalists have been forced to flee Nicaragua for their safety, increasing the number of journalists living in exile. The state authorities targeting of critical and independent journalists, activists, artists, media, students, clergy, political opponents – over this duration — has reached egregious levels.

Reports from sister organisations — such as the IACHR and the association Periodistas y Comunicadores Independientes de Nicaragua (PCIN) – echo concerns shared by PEN International, in its monitoring of mounting restrictions on freedom of expression. These also extend to the safety of disappeared journalist and cultural communicator, Fabiola Tercero, whose whereabouts remain unknown since 12 July 2024, following a police raid on her home. Fabiola Tercero also runs ‘El Rincón de Fabi’, a cultural space for the free exchange of books.

PEN International would like to remind the Nicaraguan authorities of its obligations under the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, according to which individuals deprived of their personal integrity must have their rights respected; this includes timely access to counsel and to be held in an official place of detention.

PEN International, reiterates its call to the Nicaraguan authorities to stop its relentless repression against journalists, media, cultural actors, writers and those who, for using their words and critical ideas, are victims of attacks and persecution. It demands the release of others who remain unjustly imprisoned, for their exercise of the right to peaceful expression, including the renowned academic and writer Freddy Antonio Quezada, and journalist Víctor Ticay.

War, Censorship and Persecution: PEN International Case List 2023/2024 documents censorship and history against several journalists, writers and PEN members.

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