Guardian Weekly

‘Democracy is at risk’

When Maria Ressa jointly won the Nobel peace prize in 2021 with Russian editor Dmitry Muratov, they were the first journalists to be recognised in this way since 1936. Back then, the German reporter Carl von Ossietzky couldn’t accept because he was in a Nazi concentration camp. “The Norwegian Nobel committee got the right sense,” Ressa tells me, over Zoom from her office in Manila. “They gave the awards to journalists last year and this year to civil society.” The 2022 prize went to human rights advocates from Ukraine, Russia and Belarus. Her point is that, along with journalists, these are the last ramparts against authoritarianism that’s creeping, not at all slowly, across the globe. “It’s like that Martin Niemöller quote. In the Philippines, as a joke, we’ve been saying since 2017: ‘First, they came for the journalists. We don’t know what happened next.’”

The 59-year-old apologises: she’s four minutes late because she has come straight from the supreme court of the Philippines. The government has lodged multiple specious charges against her, from cyber libel to tax evasion, which cumulatively carry a maximum sentence of more than 100 years. She has had an appeal denied and is in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guardian Weekly

Guardian Weekly2 min read
Science and Environment
The world’s first personalised mRNA cancer vaccine for melanoma is beginning phase 3 trials in hundreds of patients, as experts hailed its “gamechanging” potential to permanently cure cancer. Melanoma affects about 132,000 people a year and is the bi
Guardian Weekly3 min read
My Brother’s Bullying Still Affects Me. How Can I Deal With It?
When I was a child I was bullied by my older brother. I am 41 now and I think this has really affected me throughout my life. He always picked on me, called me stupid, fat, ugly, worthless and told me I was never good at anything. This went on every
Guardian Weekly1 min read
Sudoku Hard
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 to 9. Last week’s solution

Related Books & Audiobooks