World Press Freedom Day
Turkish cartoonist wins prize
Ag AFP
GENEVA: A Turkish caricaturist facing more than three years in jail won the International Press Drawing Prize on Thursday, an award given every two years to leading cartoonists, especially those working under authoritarian regimes. Musa Kart of the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet was one of 14 staff handed sentences last month ranging from 2 1/2 to 7 1/2 years on charges of supporting Fethullah Gulen, the U.S.-based Muslim cleric that Ankara blames for a 2016 attempted coup. They have denied the charges. Kart, 64, was sentenced to three years and nine months and is banned from travel pending his appeal. After the coup attempt, he spent nine months in prison. “My beloved newspaper is currently surrounded by those who are uncomfortable with its journalism and want to silence it completely by threatening heavy punishments,” Kart said in a message read out by his daughter, Seran Uney, to a ceremony in Geneva on Thursday, marking World Press Freedom Day.
-
Pastor Jailed After Secretly Filming Woman In Store -
Julio Iglesias Faces Serious Abuse Accusation -
Buckingham Palace’s ‘liability’ Prince Harry Comes Under Fire: ‘Can Really Harm King Charles’ -
Emily Bader Reveals Inspiration Behind Choosing Latest Project -
Anthropic Rolls Out Claude Cowork For Non-coders -
'Tell Me Lies' Creator Meaghan Oppenheimer Breaks Silence On Season 3 Rumor -
Prince Harry's Friend Rubs Shoulders With Mike Tindall And Zara -
Google Rolls Out First Android Update Of 2026 To Pixel Phones -
Matt Damon Reveals Wife Luciana Barroso Found Ben Affleck THIS In 'Good Will Hunting' -
Aurora Alert: Northern Lights Visible Tonight At High Latitudes -
Honeybees Could Help Humans Communicate With Aliens, Scientists Say -
'Home Alone' Star Daniel Stern Reflects On Overwhelming Fame -
Damson Idris, Lori Harvey Add Feul To Patch Up Rumors With PDA: Watch -
Jealous Clash Over Boyfriend At Texas Gym Ends In Arrest -
Colleen Hoover Shares Major Update On Her Cancer Battle: 'Huge And Scary' -
Trump Targets Microsoft Over AI Electricity Costs