Green Blood

About Green Blood

By Forbidden Stories

June 17, 2019

On every continent, journalists have faced danger and difficulty investigating environmental issues. Since 2009, at least 13 journalists have been killed after working on environment-related stories, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. CPJ is still investigating 16 additional deaths, so there may be as many as 29 cases.

The “Green Blood” series pursued the investigations of several reporters who faced threats when covering environmental damage and other abuses by mining companies.

For the first time, 40 journalists from 15 countries organized by Forbidden Stories were able to go in to the field, track supply chains and use open source tools to look into mines in India, Tanzania and Guatemala where questionable practices had previously been covered up.

The results of this eight-month-long collaborative investigation will be published the week of June 17 in 30 media organizations around the world to keep those stories alive.

These are the 13 reporters killed between 2009 and 2019:

These are the 13 reporters killed between 2009 and 2019: Crispin Perez (Philippines, 2009), Desidario Camangyan (Philippines, 2010), Ardiansyah Matra’is (Indonesia, 2010), Gerardo Ortega (Philippines, 2010), Darío Fernández Jaén (Panama, 2011), Wisut “Ae” Tangwittayaporn (Thailand, 2012), Hang Serei Odom (Cambodia, 2012), Sai Reddy (India, 2013), Mikhail Beketov (Russia, 2013), Jagendra Singh (India, 2015), Soe Moe Tun (Myanmar, 2016), Karun Misra (India, 2016), María Efigenia Vásquez Astudillo (Colombia, 2017)

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See also

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