The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) has now launched a public site for tracking Russian assets around the world. The project seeks to combine OCCRP reporting, open source information, and public collaboration to trace the ownership of luxury real estate, super-yachts, private jets, and other holdings of oligarchs tied to Russian President Vladimir Putin. The project's initial focus is on a list of names created by anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny, but other high-level figures identified by Western sanctions could be added soon. The group claims to have already tracked $17.5 billion in assets, with more to come.
Source: OCCRP
The independent media group openDemocracy is offering specialized fellowships to cover the global backlash against womens' and LGBTQ rights. As part of openDemocracy's 5050 initiative, the organization is sponsoring three, paid fellowships to help hone the investigative skills of early-career journalists. The three opportunities are specifically tailored to a region or topic — Eurasia, Africa, and UK trans rights — and last for six months, with the possibility of a six-month extension. The deadline to apply is April 3, 2022.
Source: openDemocracy
JouranlismFund.eu has opened the 2022 application window for its European Cross-Border Grant program, which will award funding of €200,000 (US$222,000) this year. The goal of the grants is to "support professional journalists who have good ideas for cross-border investigations and for research on European topics." Any journalist who lives in one of the 46 countries in the Council of Europe — from which Russia was just excluded — is eligible to apply. There are four application rounds in 2022 and the first deadline is Thursday, March 24th at 12:00 p.m. CET (noon Brussels time).
Source: JournalismFund.eu
Two journalists have died so far in Ukraine as a result of the Russian military's invasion. Over the past weekend, veteran correspondent Brent Renaud was shot and killed near Kyiv while on assignment for Time magazine, covering the plight of refugees around the world. The 50-year-old Renaud, who had previously worked for The New York Times, was killed when Russian forces opened fire on the car he was traveling in at a checkpoint in Irpin. Another US journalist traveling with Renaud, Juan Arredondo, was wounded in the same attack and witnessed the killing. Renaud's death was preceded by that of Yevhenii Sakun, a 49-year-old Ukrainian camera operator who was killed during the first days of the war when a TV tower in Kyiv was hit with an artillery barrage.
Source: CJR
The Brazilian Association of Investigative Journalism (ABRAJI) has released a new report on gender violence against reporters in that country. The 38-page survey, supported by UNESCO's Global Media Defence Fund, was published on March 8 to coincide with International Women's Day. It details all publicly known gender-specific attacks on male, female, and non-binary members of the media in 2021. ABRAJI also held a webinar about the report on the release date, which can be viewed in English after registering on its site for free. The full report can be downloaded at the link below.
Source: ABRAJI
The Committee to Protect Journalists issued a strong condemnation of President Vladimir Putin for a series of authoritarian measures he has undertaken to intimidate the media and roll back press freedom. After his government blocked foreign social networks and effectively shuttered the few remaining independent media sites in the country last week, the Russian parliament subsequently passed a draconian law against sharing "false information," which outlawed the use of terms like "invasion" and "war" to describe the Russian military attack on Ukraine. “President Vladimir Putin has plunged Russia into an information dark age by criminalizing independent reporting of his war in Ukraine,” CPJ executive director Robert Mahoney said. "Journalists everywhere must stand in solidarity with their Russian colleagues and foreign correspondents based in Russia in rejecting this barbarous censorship."
Source: CPJ