Press freedom predator

The importance of Press freedom predator in contemporary society is undeniable. Whether professionally, culturally, personally or politically, Press freedom predator has a significant impact on our lives. As technology advances, Press freedom predator continues to be relevant and its influence becomes increasingly evident. In this article, we will explore the role and importance of Press freedom predator in different contexts, analyzing its evolution over time and its impact on the world today. Additionally, we will examine how Press freedom predator has shaped the way we think, act and relate, and how we can harness its potential to promote change and progress in society.

Press freedom predator is an anti-award distributed every few years by Reporters Without Borders. It is attributed to heads of state or groups who are deemed to have a negative effect on press freedom.

Recipients often vehemently deny that they deserve their place on the list. In 2020, Reporters Without Borders also released a list of 20 press freedom's digital predators.

2021

In July 2021, the list of press freedom predators published by Reporters Without Borders includes:

Image Name Country Role
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi  Egypt President (2014–present)
Alexander Lukashenko  Belarus President (1994–present)
Ali Khamenei  Iran Supreme Leader (1989–present)
Bashar al-Assad  Syria President (2000–present)
Carrie Lam  Hong Kong
(part of  China)
Chief Executive (2017–2022)
Daniel Ortega  Nicaragua President (1979–1990 and 2007–present)
Emomali Rahmon  Tajikistan President (1994–present)
Gotabaya Rajapaksa  Sri Lanka President (2019–2022)
Minister of Defence (2020–2022)
Minister of Technology (2020–2022)
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov  Turkmenistan President (2007–2022)
Chairman of the People's Council (2021–present)
Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa  Bahrain King (2002–present)
Hun Sen  Cambodia Prime Minister (1998–present)
Ilham Aliyev  Azerbaijan President (2003–present)
Imran Khan  Pakistan Prime Minister (2018–2022)
Isaias Afwerki  Eritrea President (1993–present)
Ismaïl Omar Guelleh  Djibouti President (1999–present)
Jair Bolsonaro  Brazil President (2019–2022)
Kim Jong Un  DPR Korea First Chairman of the National Defense Commission (2012–2016)
President of the State Affairs (2016–present)
Lee Hsien Loong  Singapore Prime Minister (2004–present)
Miguel Díaz-Canel  Cuba President of the Council of State (2018–2019)

President (2019–present)

Min Aung Hlaing  Myanmar Commander-in-Chief of Defence Services (2011–present)

Chairman of the State Administration Council (2021–present)
Prime Minister (2021–present)

Mohammed bin Salman  Saudi Arabia Minister of Defense (2015–present)

Crown Prince (2017–present)

Narendra Modi  India Prime Minister (2014–present)
Nguyen Phu Trong  Vietnam General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee (2011–present)

President (2018–2021)

Nicolás Maduro  Venezuela President (2013–present)
Paul Biya  Cameroon President (1982–present)
Paul Kagame  Rwanda President (2000–present)
Prayut Chan-o-cha  Thailand Prime Minister (2014–2023)
Minister of Defence (2019–2023)
Ramzan Kadyrov  Chechnya
(part of  Russia)
President (2007–2011)

Head (2011–present)

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan  Turkey Prime Minister (2003–2014)

President (2014–present)

Rodrigo Duterte  Philippines President (2016–2020)
Salva Kiir Mayardit  South Sudan President (2011–present)
Sheikh Hasina  Bangladesh Prime Minister (1996–2001 and 2009–present)
Leader of the House (2009–present)
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo  Equatorial Guinea President (1979–present)
Viktor Orbán  Hungary Prime Minister (1998–2002 and 2010–present)
Vladimir Putin  Russia President (2000–2008 and 2012–present)
Prime Minister (2008–2012)
Xi Jinping  China President (2013–present)
Yoweri Museveni  Uganda President (1986–present)

2016

In October 2016, the list of press freedom predators published by Reporters Without Borders includes:

Image Name Country Role
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi  Egypt President (2014–present)
Al-Shabaab  Somalia Islamic insurgence group active in East Africa
Alexander Lukashenko  Belarus President (1994–present)
Ali Khamenei  Iran Supreme Leader (1989–present)
Ansar Allah  Yemen Islamist political and armed movement in Yemen
Ansarullah Bangla Team  Bangladesh Islamic jihadist organization in Bangladesh
Bashar al-Assad  Syria President (2000–present)
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov  Turkmenistan President (2007–2022)
Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa  Bahrain King (2002–present)
Ilham Aliyev  Azerbaijan President (2003–present)
Isaias Afwerki  Eritrea President (1993–present)
Islamic State  Iraq
 Syria
 Afghanistan
 Libya
Militant Islamist group and former unrecognized quasi-state
Joseph Kabila  DR Congo President (2001–2019)
Kim Jong Un  DPR Korea First Chairman of the National Defense Commission (2012–2016)
President of the State Affairs (2016–present)
Lee Hsien Loong  Singapore Prime Minister (2004–present)
Los Zetas  Mexico Mexican criminal syndicate
Nguyen Phu Trong  Vietnam General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee (2011–present)

President (2018–2021)

Nicolás Maduro  Venezuela President (2013–present)
Nursultan Nazarbayev  Kazakhstan President (1991–2019)
Omar al-Bashir  Sudan President (1993–2019)
Inter-Services Intelligence  Pakistan Pakistan's intelligence agency
Paul Kagame  Rwanda President (2000–present)
Pierre Nkurunziza  Burundi President (2005–2020)
Prayut Chan-o-cha  Thailand Prime Minister (2014–2023)
Minister of Defence (2019–2023)
Ramzan Kadyrov  Chechnya
(part of  Russia)
President (2007–2011)

Head (2011–present)

Raúl Castro  Cuba President of the Council of State (2008–2018)
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan  Turkey President (2014–present)
Prime Minister (2003–2014)
Robert Mugabe  Zimbabwe President (1987–2017)
Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud  Saudi Arabia King (2015–present)
Crown Prince (2012–2015)
Minister of Defence (2011–2015)
Salva Kiir Mayardit  South Sudan President (2011–present)
Taliban  Afghanistan Islamic fundamentalist, militant Islamist, and jihadist political movement in Afghanistan
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo  Equatorial Guinea President (1979–present)
Vladimir Putin  Russia President (2000–2008 and 2012–present)
Prime Minister (2008–2012)
Xi Jinping  China President (2013–present)
Yahya Jammeh  The Gambia President (1996–2017)

2013

In May 2013, the list of press freedom predators published by Reporters Without Borders includes:

Africa

Image Name Country Role
Al-Shabaab  Somalia Islamic insurgence group active in East Africa
Boko Haram  Nigeria Islamic terrorist organization based in northeastern Nigeria
Hizbul Islam  Somalia Somali Islamist group
Isaias Afwerki  Eritrea President (1993–present)
Mswati III  Eswatini King (1986–present)
Paul Kagame  Rwanda President (2000–present)
Robert Mugabe  Zimbabwe President (1987–2017)
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo  Equatorial Guinea President (1979–present)
Yahya Jammeh  The Gambia President (1996–2017)

Americas

Image Name Country Role
Dario Antonio Úsuga  Colombia Leader of the drug trafficking group Clan del Golfo
Los Zetas  Mexico Mexican criminal syndicate
Miguel Facussé Barjum  Honduras Honduran businessman and landowner
Miguel Treviño Morales  Mexico Mexican drug lord
Raúl Castro  Cuba President of the Council of State (2008–2018)

Asia

Image Name Country Role
Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud  Saudi Arabia Prime Minister (1996–2015)

King (2005–2015)

Abu Mohammad al-Julani  Syria Emir of the Al-Nusra Front (2012–2017)

Commander-in-chief of Tahrir al-Sham (2017–present)

Ali Khamenei  Iran Supreme Leader (1989–present)
Balochistan Liberation Army  Pakistan Militant group waging a violent armed struggle against Pakistan for what it claims as self-determination for the Baloch people and separation of Balochistan from Pakistan.
Bashar al-Assad  Syria President (2000–present)
Choummaly Sayasone  Laos President (2006–2016)
Gotabaya Rajapaksa  Sri Lanka President (2019–2022)
Minister of Defence (2019–2022)
Minister of Technology (2020–2022)
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov  Turkmenistan President (2007–2022)
Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa  Bahrain King (2002–present)
Ilham Aliyev  Azerbaijan President (2003–present)
Inter-Services Intelligence  Pakistan Pakistan's intelligence agency
Islam Karimov  Uzbekistan President (1991–2016)
Israel Defence Forces  Israel Military forces of Israel
Kim Jong Un  DPR Korea First Chairman of the National Defense Commission (2012–2016)
President of the State Affairs (2016–present)
Leaders and members of extremist religious groups  Maldives
Mahinda Rajapaksa  Sri Lanka President (2005–2015)
Prime Minister (2019–2022)
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  Iran President (2005–2013)
Mullah Omar  Afghanistan Founder and leader of Taliban
Supreme Leader (1996–2001)
Muslim Brotherhood  Egypt Transnational Sunni Islamist organization
Nguyen Phu Trong  Vietnam General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee (2011–present)

President (2018–2021)

Nursultan Nazarbayev  Kazakhstan President (1991–2019)
Private militias  Philippines
Vasif Talibov  Nakhchivan
(part of  Azerbaijan)
Chairman of the Supreme Assembly (1993–present)
Xi Jinping  China President (2013–present)

Europe

Image Name Country Role
Alexander Lukashenko  Belarus President (1994–present)
Camorra  Italy Italian Mafia-type criminal organization and criminal society originating in the region of Campania, and is one of the oldest and largest criminal organizations in Italy.
Ramzan Kadyrov  Chechnya
(part of  Russia)
President (2007–2011)

Head (2011–present)

Vladimir Putin  Russia President (2000–2008 and 2012–present)
Prime Minister (2008–2012)

2009–2011

The list of press freedom predators published by Reporters Without Borders from 2009 to 2011 includes:

Image Name Country Role
Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud  Saudi Arabia King (2005–2015)
Prime Minister (2005–2015)
Abdulkadir Hussein Mohamed  Somalia Minister of Information, Posts and Telecommunications
Alexander Lukashenko  Belarus President (1994–present)
Al-Shabaab  Somalia Islamic insurgence group active in East Africa
Ali Abdullah Saleh  Yemen President (1990–2012)
Ali Khamenei  Iran Supreme Leader (1989–present)
Bashar al-Assad  Syria President (2000–present)
Black Eagles  Colombia Colombian paramilitary forces
Choummaly Sayasone  Laos President (2006–2016)
Euskadi Ta Askatasuna  Spain Armed Basque nationalist and separatist terrorist organization
Gotabaya Rajapaksa  Sri Lanka President (2019–2022)
Minister of Defence (2019–2022)
Minister of Technology (2020–2022)
Gulf Cartel  Mexico Mexican drug cartel
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov  Turkmenistan President (2007–2022)
Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa  Bahrain King (2002–present)
Hamas  Palestine Palestinian Sunni-Islamic fundamentalist, militant and nationalist organization
Hizbul Islam  Somalia Somali Islamist group
Hu Jintao  China President (2003–2013)
Ilham Aliyev  Azerbaijan President (2003–present)
Isaias Afwerki  Eritrea President (1993–present)
Islam Karimov  Uzbekistan President (1991–2016)
Israel Defence Forces  Israel Military forces of the State of Israel
Janatantrik Terai Mukti Morcha    Nepal Political organisation in Nepal
Juárez Cartel  Mexico Mexican drug cartel
Kim Jong Il  DPR Korea Chairman of the National Defence Commission (1993–2011)
Madhesh Mukti Tigers    Nepal Armed group in Nepal
Mahinda Rajapaksa  Sri Lanka President (2005–2015)
Prime Minister (2019–2022)
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  Iran President (2005–2013)
Mswati III  Eswatini King (1986–present)
Mullah Omar  Afghanistan Founder and leader of Taliban
Supreme Leader (1996–2001)
Muammar Gaddafi  Libya Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council (1969–1977)

Secretary General of the General People's Congress (1977–1979) Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution (1979–2011)
Chairperson of the African Union (2009–2010)

Nong Duc Manh  Vietnam General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee (2001–2011)
Nursultan Nazarbayev  Kazakhstan President (1991–2019)
Ogbonna Okechukwu Onovo  Nigeria Inspector General of the Police (2009–2010)
Organized crime  Italy
Palestinian Security Services  Palestine Armed forces and intelligence agencies of Palestine
Paul Kagame  Rwanda President (2000–present)
Private militias  Philippines
Ramzan Kadyrov  Chechnya
(part of  Russia)
President (2007–2011)

Head (2011–present)

Raúl Castro  Cuba President of the Council of State (2008–2018)
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia  Colombia Colombian Marxist–Leninist guerrilla group
Robert Mugabe  Zimbabwe President (1987–2017)
Sinaloa Cartel  Mexico Mexican drug cartel
Tarek Kamel  Egypt Minister of Communications and Information Technology (2004–2011)
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo  Equatorial Guinea President (1979–present)
Than Shwe  Myanmar Chairman of the State Peace and Development Council (1992–2011)
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces (1992–2011)
Prime Minister (1992–2003)
Tijuana Cartel  Mexico Mexican drug cartel
Velupillai Prabhakaran  Sri Lanka Leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
Vladimir Putin  Russia President (2000–2008 and 2012–present)
Prime Minister (2008–2012)
Yahya Jammeh  The Gambia President (1996–2017)
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali  Tunisia President (1987–2011)

2001

In November 2001, the list of press freedom predators published by Reporters Without Borders includes:

Image Name Country Role
Ali Khamenei  Iran Supreme Leader (1989–present)
Alexander Lukashenko  Belarus President (1994–present)
Bashar al-Assad  Syria President (2000–present)
Carlos Castaño Gil  Colombia Colombian paramilitary leader and founder of the Peasant Self-Defenders of Córdoba and Urabá
Euskadi Ta Askatasuna  Spain Amed Basque nationalist and separatist terrorist organization
Fahd bin Abdulaziz Al Saud  Saudi Arabia Prime Minister (1975–1996)

King (1982–2005)

Fidel Castro  Cuba President of the Council of State (1976–2008)
President of the Council of Ministers (1976–2008)
Prime Minister (1959–1976)
Secretary-General of the Non-Aligned Movement (1979–1983 and 2006–2008)
François Compaoré  Burkina Faso Economic Advisor to the President (1989–2014)
Gnassingbé Eyadéma  Togo President (1967–2005)
Hüseyin Kıvrıkoğlu  Turkey Chief of the General Staff (1998–2002)
Isaias Afwerki  Eritrea President (1993–present)
Islam Karimov  Uzbekistan President (1991–2016)
Jiang Zemin  China President (1993–2003)
Joseph Kabila  DR Congo President (2001–2019)
José Eduardo dos Santos  Angola President (1979–2017)
Joynal Hazari  Bangladesh Bangladeshi politician and member of Jatiya Sangsad, representing the Feni-2 constituency (1986–1987, 1991–1996 and 1996–2001)
Khamtai Siphandone  Laos President (1998–2006)
Kidnapping mafia  Chechnya
(part of  Russia)
Kim Jong Il  DPR Korea Chairman of the National Defence Commission (1993–2011)
Kirsan Ilyumzhinov  Kalmykia
(part of  Russia)
President (1993–2010)
Leonid Kuchma  Ukraine President (1994–2005)
Mahatir Mohammad  Malaysia Prime Minister (1981–2003 and 2018–2020)
Manuel Marulanda  Colombia Leader of Revolutionary Armed Forces
Meles Zenawi  Ethiopia Prime Minister (1995–2012)
Mswati III  Eswatini King (1986–present)
Muammar Gaddafi  Libya Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council (1969–1977)

Secretary General of the General People's Congress (1977–1979) Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution (1979–2011)
Chairperson of the African Union (2009–2010)

Mullah Omar  Afghanistan Founder and leader of Taliban
Supreme Leader (1996–2001)
Nicolás Rodríguez Bautista  Colombia Commander of National Liberation Army (1998–2021)
Nong Duc Manh  Vietnam General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee (2001–2011)
Palestinian Security Services  Palestine Armed forces and intelligence agencies of Palestine
Paul Kagame  Rwanda President (2000–present)
Robert Mugabe  Zimbabwe President (1987–2017)
Saddam Hussein  Iraq President (1979–2003)
Saparmurat Niyazov  Turkmenistan President (1991–2006)
Shaul Mofaz  Israel Defense Minister (2002–2006)
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo  Equatorial Guinea President (1979–present)
Than Shwe  Myanmar Chairman of the State Peace and Development Council (1992–2011)
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces (1992–2011)
Prime Minister (1992–2003)
Vladimir Putin  Russia President (2000–2008 and 2012–present)
Prime Minister (2008–2012)
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali  Tunisia President (1987–2011)

Digital press freedom predators

In March 2020, as part of the World Day Against Cyber-Censorship, the Reporters Without Borders published a list of digital press freedom predators. The list includes:

Harassment

Name Country Description
Electronic Flies  Algeria Army of internet trolls in the Algerian government's payroll. Their main task is to discredit all journalists critical of the government by engaging in online abuse, posting personal information about them and public reporting of critical posts in online platforms in order to remove them.
Hate Office  Brazil Consisting of close presidential advisers of President Jair Bolsonaro and coordinated by his son Carlos, the group publishes attacks against journalists on a large scale by engaging in social media campaigns of insults and threats. The existence of such group was revealed by Brazilian parliamentarian and former ally of Bolsonaro Joice Hasselmann.
Modi's Yoddhas  India Internet trolls who either volunteer their services or are paid employees of the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and are supporters of the current Prime Minister Narendra Modi. They engage in social media insults, calls for rape and death threats against critics of Modi. Yoddhas in Hindi language means 'warriors'.
The Kremlin's Troll Army  Russia An internet troll army which have an implicit backing of the Government and President Vladimir Putin. They spread false reports and videos, engage in doxing and defamation against critics of Putin, and also spread propaganda about those who denounce their activities.
Troll Gangs  Mexico An internet troll group who have engaged in social media smears, threats and insults against journalists who have questioned President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's decision to release drug lord El Chapo's son Ovidio Guzmán López.

State censorship

Image Name Country Role
Cyberspace Administration of China  China The central internet regulator, censor, oversight, and control agency for China. The agency engages in internet censorship and supervision of private-sector platforms such as Baidu, WeChat, Weibo and Douyin, and blocking and deleting content and apps. During the COVID-19 pandemic in China, the agency has suppressed social media accounts of media outlets and bloggers, and censored news outlets critical of the government's handling of the pandemic.
Ministry of Home Affairs  India The ministry of the Government of India, which is mainly responsible for the maintenance of internal security and domestic policy of the country. On 5 August 2019, it completely disconnected internet communication in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, resulting in Kashmiri journalists unable to work freely and depriving all of the state's residents from accessing independently reported news and information. Despite broadband connections being partially restored after six months, access to many sites remains largely uncertain and India is the country that most uses Internet shutdowns, with a total of 121 in 2019.
National Commission of Telecommunications
(Conatel)
 Venezuela An agency of the Government of Venezuela that exercises the regulation, supervision and control over telecommunications. It orders the blocking of websites that are critical of the authorities of the government and many have been blocked without any possibility of appeal. The agency also temporarily blocks social media platforms such as Facebook, especially when opposition leader Juan Guaidó’s speeches are being broadcast live on Facebook.
Roskomnadzor
(Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media)
 Russia The Russian federal executive agency responsible for monitoring, controlling and censoring Russian mass media. It has blocked more than 490,000 websites without warning and without respecting legal procedure, and maintains a secret blacklist of banned sites. The agency also blocks platforms and apps that refuse to store their data on servers in Russia or provide the Russian authorities the means to decrypt messages.
Supreme Council of Cyberspace  Iran The agency was created in 2012, and consists of senior military and political figures. They engage in online selective access and control, blocking news websites, social media platforms and messaging apps such as Telegram, Signal, WhatsApp, Facebook and Twitter. Internet shutdowns are increasingly used to contain and suppress waves of street protests in the country, and publishing independent information are regarded as "counter-revolutionary" or "subversive" in nature.
Supreme Council for Media Regulation
(SCMR)
 Egypt The agency was created in 2017 to "devise and implement the media strategy for the Egyptian state." It engages in the blocking of news sites and messaging apps under the grounds that they publish false information. More than 500 websites and 11 messaging apps are currently inaccessible in Egypt.

Disinformation

Name Country Description
Call Centre Hubs  Philippines Consisting of supporters of President Rodrigo Duterte, they disseminate fake memes, maliciously edited content and conduct targeted harassment campaigns with the aim of smearing the media and manipulating public opinion. They had launched a campaign to smear and boycott the ABS-CBN radio and TV network with the aim of blocking the renewal of its licence.
Cyber Jihadist Unit  Sudan The internet troll army that was created by the National Intelligence and Security Service, which spies on activists, politicians and journalists on social media. It also disseminates messages and articles with false information designed to discredit members of the current transitional government.
Force 47  Vietnam An internet army of 10,100 cyber soldiers run by the Ministry of Public Security. They are tasked with setting up, moderating and posting on pro-state Facebook groups. The group is also considered the largest and most sophisticated influence network in Southeast Asia.
Saudi Electronic Brigade  Saudi Arabia Led by Saud al-Qahtani, the then advisor to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the network of pro-Saudi Twitter trolls and bots used to produce more than 2,500 tweets a day consisting of false information and hate messages against the critics of the Government of Saudi Arabia.

Spying Surveillance

Name Country Description
Gamma Group  Germany
 United Kingdom
An Anglo-German technology company that sells surveillance software to governments and police forces around the world. The FinFisher software, which was developed by the company, has been used by undemocratic regimes to spy on activists and journalists.
Memento Labs
(formerly known as Hacking Team)
 Italy
 Saudi Arabia
  Switzerland
The company created spyware capable of extracting files from a targeted device, intercepting emails and instant messages, and activating a device's webcam or microphone, which was then sold to law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
Mollitiam Industries  Spain A Spanish software company that developed tools for intercepting phone calls and emails. One of the customers of its product is the Colombian Armed Forces, which used it to illegally spy on supreme court judges, politicians, journalists and journalists' sources.
NSO Group  Israel An Israeli technology firm primarily known for its proprietary spyware Pegasus, which uses a WhatsApp flaw to install on targeted smartphones and send them infected files that open automatically. The spyware has been used to target human rights activists and journalists in various countries.
Zerodium
(formerly known as Vupen)
 United States An American information security company based in Washington, D.C. and Europe, which pays bounties to hackers and security researchers to be exclusively informed about their discoveries, which is used to spy on journalists to foreign governments.

References

  1. ^ "Pakistan rejects naming of PM Khan as press freedom 'predator'". www.aljazeera.com.
  2. ^ "Press freedom: India, Pakistan PMs among 37 world leaders on 'predators' list - Times of India". The Times of India.
  3. ^ "Baseless to include Duterte on 'press freedom predator' list". www.pna.gov.ph.
  4. ^ "RSF unveils 20/2020 list of press freedom's digital predators". 12 March 2020. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  5. ^ "RSF's 2021 "Press freedom predators" gallery – old tyrants, two women and a European | Reporters without borders". RSF. 2 July 2021.
  6. ^ "Predators 2021" (PDF). RSF. 2021.
  7. ^ "Press Freedom Predators" (PDF). Reporters Without Borders. 2016. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  8. ^ "Predators" (PDF). RSF. 2013. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  9. ^ Juillard, Jef (4 May 2007). "Media predators". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  10. ^ Townend, Judith (4 May 2010). "Reporters Without Borders names 40 press freedom 'predators'". journalism.co.uk. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  11. ^ "Predators of Press Freedom" (PDF). kubatana.net. 2010. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  12. ^ "RSF publishes list of thirty-nine "press freedom predators"". ifex. 6 November 2001. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  13. ^ "RSF unveils 20/2020 list of press freedom's digital predators" (PDF). Reporters Without Borders. 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  14. ^ Beaumont, Peter (12 March 2020). "List of world's worst 'digital predators' stretches from India and Brazil to US". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  15. ^ Pearson, James (9 July 2021). "How Vietnam's 'influencer' army wages information warfare on Facebook". Reuters. Retrieved 27 June 2022.