The Voice of America headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, Could 29, 2025.
Bloomberg/Bloomberg through Getty Photos/Bloomberg
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Bloomberg/Bloomberg through Getty Photos/Bloomberg
On Friday, the Trump administration issued mass layoff notices gutting the company that owns the Voice of America and funds its sister information shops.
That very same day, a correspondent arrested in Azerbaijan whereas working for a kind of sister networks — Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty — was sentenced to 9 years in jail on fees his bosses contemplate bogus.
Given current headlines about their employers, different journalists for the federally funded information shops who’re overseas residents say they ponder whether they may have the U.S. authorities’s help in the event that they change into victims of political retribution by their international locations’ leaders.
About 1,400 jobs, or 85% of positions, are being eradicated on the U.S. Company for World Media in line with an government order issued in mid-March by President Trump, senior White Home adviser Kari Lake stated on Friday. The cuts all however wipe out the Voice of America, which has broadcast information protection and cultural packages to folks residing below repressive regimes since World Battle II.
“For many years,” Lake stated in a written assertion, “American taxpayers have been pressured to bankroll an company that is been riddled with dysfunction, bias, and waste. That ends now.”
Individuals who had been working for the company previous to Trump’s second time period took grave exception to her actions.
“The scope of the company’s actions seems huge and would eviscerate Voice of America’s congressionally mandated function to offer goal information to closed societies and different locations all over the world,” Michael Abramowitz, the Voice of America’s director, stated in a letter to colleagues. He’s presently on involuntary paid administrative go away however had not obtained a layoff discover by Friday afternoon.
Earlier than these new notices to staffers, Lake already had fired greater than 500 contractors at Voice of America, a lot of whom are residents of different international locations and introduced journalistic and language expertise to their roles at VOA. Lake has been looking for to carry again funds designated by Congress to the opposite government-funded worldwide networks, that are technically non-public nonprofits. These embrace Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia and the Center East Broadcasting Networks.
Lake’s actions have forged doubt on the federal government’s dedication to non-American journalists working all over the world for these networks. Some have risked their lives and their livelihoods to cowl thorny points affecting their house international locations.
“I’m very involved in regards to the destiny of a lot of our journalists at Voice of America,” Abramowitz tells NPR. “The U.S. authorities has an ethical obligation to do all the things in its energy to ensure those that labored on its behalf keep out of hurt’s method.”
The case of Farid Mehralizada
On Friday, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reporter Farid Mehralizada was sentenced to 9 years in jail in his native Azerbaijan for smuggling, tax evasion, and forgery — fees that community executives and human rights teams say are false. In an announcement learn in courtroom, Mehralizada, who can also be an economist, stated he had sought by means of his studies to supply his experience on the challenges dealing with the nation together with his fellow Azerbaijanis.
“The one method to obtain sustainable financial improvement in any nation is for residents to know the essence of financial processes, to make sure participation in decision-making, and to ensure freedom of expression,” Mehralizada stated in his assertion, which was shared with NPR. “Sadly, journalism in our nation as we speak is nearly equated with terrorism.”
Throughout his greater than year-long imprisonment awaiting trial, Mehralizada missed the start of his youngster. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty President and CEO Stephen Capus known as for Mehralizada to be returned to his household.
“RFE/RL’s U.S.-funded journalists work in among the most harmful environments conceivable,” Capus stated. “Farid’s case is a tragic instance of the dangers that include reporting uncomfortable truths.”
Colleagues at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty are equally imprisoned in Belarus, Russia, and Russia-occupied Crimea.
Three Vietnamese freelance journalists for Radio Free Asia are presently serving jail phrases starting from six to 11 years in Vietnam.
Three journalists for the Voice of America are in jail as effectively, in Azerbaijan, Myanmar and Vietnam.
A scramble to search out refuge
VOA journalists who’re residents of nations the place the federal government represses the media, or is hostile to the U.S., concern what’s going to occur in the event that they return house when their non-immigrant J-1 visas expire on the finish of the month.
Many are scrambling — with assist from colleagues — to search out different jobs within the U.S. Some are looking for asylum.
The half-dozen Voice of America journalists on this state of affairs who spoke with NPR come from international locations in Africa, Japanese Europe and Asia. They share an identical chorus: They are saying in the event that they return house, they’re prone to be prevented from working, imprisoned or worse.
One reporter for a overseas language service of Voice of America says he fears returning to his West African house. (NPR isn’t utilizing his identify or his house nation at his request for concern of repercussions for him and his relations.)
Media shops in his nation are shut down after they cowl the regime critically — and even after they merely report on protests. Overseas information organizations may be thrown out. He says he got here to the U.S. as a result of it turned more and more perilous to report brazenly in his house nation or neighboring nations.
“They are not going to throw me a parade,” the Voice of America journalist tells NPR. “They see folks working for worldwide networks as a spy. I can simply disappear, you realize? They might kidnap me or [I could] go to jail.”
He says he additionally fears for his household.
“It is only a intestine punch”
Ivana Konstantinovic was a information anchor and producer primarily based in Washington D.C. for the Voice of America’s Serbian-language service till her contract was terminated as a part of Lake’s mass firings of contractors this spring. She was fired as soon as earlier than, through the first Trump administration, however returned two years in the past. She says Serbia isn’t as repressive as Russia however reporting there may be fraught. An evaluation by the Committee to Defend Journalists discovered that assaults in opposition to members of the media there are on the rise.
“Serbia is a rustic the place [the] authorities targets unbiased journalists,” Konstantinovic says in a textual content message. “We had been all invited right here to D.C. due to our expertise, language expertise, connections with audience, understanding of the political panorama, and so forth. VOA wanted us.”
Voice of America’s press freedom editor, Jessica Jerreat, argues that Trump’s government order wrongly sends the alternative message.
“Now they’re simply discarded,” Jerreat says of the overseas journalists. “After this government order, you are now not wanted. It is only a intestine punch for all of the service and experience these folks deliver.”
Jerreat, who’s among the many Voice of America staffers now suing the community, obtained her personal termination discover on Friday.