On June 6, Ukraine marks Journalist’s Day—a profession that has become not only a means of delivering information, but also a frontline in the struggle for freedom. In a world where words shape reality, independent media represent one of the greatest threats to authoritarian regimes. This is precisely why, for the past eleven years, the Russian occupying administration in Crimea has been waging an aggressive campaign against journalists, aiming to suppress the flow of truthful information from the peninsula.
Since 2014, Crimea has become a territory where practicing independent journalism means facing imminent danger, and where objective reporting can put a journalist behind bars. Ukrainian media outlets have been forcibly removed from the region’s information space, with their broadcasting frequencies unlawfully seized and replaced by Russian state propaganda channels. The occupying administration has actively jammed Ukrainian signals, blocked access to independent news sources, and fabricated criminal charges against journalists.
Today, 30 Ukrainian journalists remain imprisoned in Russia, including 18 from Crimea. Among them are Vladyslav Yesypenko, Nariman Memedeminov, and Aider Kadyrov, who have been charged with so-called “extremism” and “discrediting the Russian army.” These convictions are handed down without proper evidence, while the journalists are subjected to torture, deprived of medical care, and held in inhumane conditions.
Despite ongoing repression, Crimea became the birthplace of a powerful citizen journalism movement — a spontaneous response to the information vacuum caused by the persecution of professional journalists, travel bans, arrests, and the silencing of Ukrainian broadcasters. This movement gained momentum particularly after 2016, when raids and detentions of Crimean activists became systematic, and Russian state media either ignored these developments or distorted them through propaganda.
Over time, these citizen journalists learned to collaborate with professional media outlets, uphold journalistic ethics, and contribute meaningfully to Ukraine’s information frontline. Today, this movement continues to evolve, despite ongoing unlawful searches, detentions, and politically motivated prosecutions.
Ukrainian journalists working under occupation have, in many cases, become part of the broader civic resistance. They are fully aware of the risks to their freedom but remain committed to reporting the truth. Kateryna Yesypenko, wife of unlawfully imprisoned journalist Vladyslav Yesypenko, stated at a public forum: “Freedom of speech is unacceptable to the FSB, because it challenges the entire system of repression.”
On this day, we remember the names of those who are behind bars simply for seeking and speaking the truth. We call on the international community to break its silence and stand in solidarity with Ukrainian journalists working under occupation.
Journalism is not only a profession—it is a form of resistance. And as long as journalists persist, truth prevails.