Author: News Editor

As the News Editor at News Journos, I am dedicated to curating and delivering the latest and most impactful stories across business, finance, politics, technology, and global affairs. With a commitment to journalistic integrity, we provide breaking news, in-depth analysis, and expert insights to keep our readers informed in an ever-changing world. News Journos is your go-to independent news source, ensuring fast, accurate, and reliable reporting on the topics that matter most.

“In Turkey, journalists now spend more time in courtrooms than in newsrooms.” A Western diplomat’s bitter observation, shared in confidence, perfectly captures the grim reality of press freedom under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The courthouse corridor has become the forced habitat of Turkish journalism, a place where reporters are not covering the news, but have become the story itself—defendants in a war against truth. This is not hyperbole. The statistics are a testament to a systematic purge: in a single year, 500 journalists were dismissed from their jobs, 70 were physically attacked, and thousands have been prosecuted under a law…

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President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s notorious intolerance for dissent was brazenly exported to the streets of the American capital, as his personal security detail physically and verbally assaulted journalists and protesters outside a prestigious Washington think tank. The incident provided a shocking, firsthand look at the brutal tactics used to silence critics in Turkey, now deployed on US soil. The confrontations erupted as Erdoğan prepared to speak at the Brookings Institution. His bodyguards, exhibiting the same aggression seen on the streets of Istanbul and Ankara, moved to suppress any form of protest. Amberin Zaman, a respected Turkish journalist with the Woodrow…

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When President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan cited Hitler’s Germany as a model for an effective presidential system, his office was quick to claim the media had “distorted” his words. Yet, for the editor-in-chief of the country’s most influential newspaper, Hürriyet, simply reporting on the President’s controversial statements was enough to face a potential five-year prison sentence for “insult.” In Erdoğan’s Turkey, the assault on free speech has moved far beyond a “worrying” trend; it has become a systematic and ruthless campaign to crush all forms of opposition. The judiciary, once a pillar of the republic, now operates as a weapon of…

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