The Samir Kassir Foundation joined more than 100 members and partners of the Global Forum for Media Development and IFEX to strongly condemn the Zambian government’s decision to force the last-minute cancellation of RightsCon 2026 due to the foreign interference of China over the participation of Taiwanese delegates. The world’s leading summit on human rights in the digital age was due to take place from 5-8 May in Lusaka.
Shutting down an international civil society forum through its invocation of prior restraint on content of the programme and citing the need for alignment with “national values, policy priorities, and broader public-interest considerations” represents a serious and unacceptable violation of universal human rights standards including freedom of assembly, press freedom, independent journalism, and open civic space which are protected by Articles 19 and 21 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
That pressure from China influenced Zambia’s decision further demonstrates the scale and severity of threats facing the civic space environment from foreign interference. No government should have the power to compromise such convenings.
Although this is an extremely serious attack on human rights, it is not isolated. These developments take place in an already challenging context of shrinking liberties and funding for journalism, digital rights, and free expression communities worldwide.
Effectively cancelling RightsCon and thereby seriously disrupting UNESCO’s World Press Freedom Day conference on 4 May weakens an already strained ecosystem and contributes to fragmentation, isolation, and, ultimately, a chilling effect on collective action.
Multistakeholderism must be protected in practice, not just proclaimed in principle
Members of international platforms such as the Media Freedom Coalition and Freedom Online Coalition must continue to use their convening power to ensure the participation of civil society in global forums and take concrete action against restrictions on civic space and freedom of expression.
For future regional and international fora, the demands of journalism, digital rights, and free expression communities for the physical, digital, and legal conditions for safe and open convening must be met by the UN, other inter-governmental organisations and States.
Restoring the legacy of the Windhoek Declaration
Zambia’s decision is symbolically significant because of its proximity to Namibia, where in 1991 the signing of the Windhoek declaration led directly to the UN declaring 3 May as World Press Freedom Day two years later.
Promoting independent, pluralistic, and free media, it urges governments to protect journalists and avoid media control. Its renewal in 2021 reaffirmed a regional and international commitment to media freedom, independence, and safety.
That legacy underscores what is threatened today. These challenges remind us of the need for media to remain agile and innovative, and to uphold functional independence from any one specific actor.
Safeguarding the future of World Press Freedom Day and of the broader ecosystems it engenders requires renewed collective commitment to solidarity, accountability, and the protection of civic space.
We stand with our colleagues in Zambia and across Southern Africa
We express our solidarity with the almost 3,000 journalists, digital rights defenders, press freedom and media support and civil society actors in Zambia, across Africa, and globally who have been directly affected by the last-minute cancellation of RightsCon 2026 and the subsequent drastic downscaling of UNESCO’s World Press Freedom Day conference in Lusaka on 4 May.
We also express our strong support and solidarity with AccessNow, the organisers of RightsCon, as well as all their partners who had planned side events to further their vital work.
Above all, we stand with our colleagues in Zambia and across Southern Africa who continue to work indefatigably under increasingly constrained conditions.
Signatories
- 7amleh – The Arab Center for the Advancement of Social Media
- Accountability Lab
- ACOS Alliance
- African Women in Media
- Alhudood
- Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) Indonesia
- Asosiasi Media Siber Indonesia (AMSI)
- Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism (ARIJ)
- ARTICLE 19
- Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression (AFTE).
- Association for International Broadcasting (AIB)
- Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN)
- Cambodian Center for Human Rights (CCHR)
- Cartoonists Rights
- Catholic Media Council (CAMECO) e.V
- Centre for Journalism and Democracy
- Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ) Malaysia
- Centre for Law and Democracy
- Centre for Media and Society (CEMESO)
- Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR)
- Center for Sustainable Media (CSM)
- Centro de Archivos y Acceso a la Información (Cainfo)C
- critical infrastructure lab – University of Amsterdam
- Daily Humanity Foundation
- Daily Nawa-I-Ahmedpur Sharqia Pakistan
- DW Akademie
- Eastern Africa Editors Society (EAES)
- Espacio Público
- Ethical Journalism Network
- European Federation of Journalists (EFJ)
- Excellence Foundation for South Sudan
- Factjaja
- Febrayer Network
- FlokiNET ehf
- Fojo Media Institute
- Fondation Hirondelle – Media for peace and human dignity
- Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa (FLIP, Colombia)
- Freedom Forum, Nepal
- Freedom of Expression (FXI)
- Gambia Press Union (GPU)
- Gisa Group | 3ayin
- Global Forum for Media Development (GFMD)
- Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN)
- Global Voices
- Global Youth & News Media
- GoodBot Society
- Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR)
- IDEM e.V.
- Hungarian Civil Liberties Union
- I’lam – Arab Center for Media Freedom Development and Research
- IFEX
- IFoX/Initiative for Freedom of Expression-Turkey
- Institut Panos-Haiti
- Institute for Regional Media and Information (IRMI)
- International Association of Women in Radio and Television -(IAWRT-Kenya)
- International Federation of Journalists (IFJ)
- International Federation for Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA)
- International Press Centre (IPC)
- International Service for Human Rights (ISHR)
- Internews Europe
- Institute of Mass Information (IMI)
- International Media Support
- Instituto Prensa y Sociedad – IPYS, Perú
- JASS – Just Associates
- Journalismfund Europe
- JUMMAR
- Lviv Media Forum
- Media Action Nepal
- Media Development Center (Tunisia)
- Media Diversity Institute
- Media Diversity Institute Global
- Media Leadership Think Tank, GIBS
- Media Policy Institute (MPI) Kyrgyzstan
- Media Rights Agenda (MRA)
- Media Self Regulation Council of Zambia
- Media Voice
- Momentum – Journalism and Tech Task Force
- Moxii Africa
- Muwatin Media Network
- National Union of Journalists of Ukraine
- NMT Media Foundation
- Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms (MADA)
- Paradigm Initiative (PIN)
- PEN America
- PEN International
- Penn Center on Media, Technology, and Democracy (Penn MEDIATED)
- Press Club Belarus
- Protection International (PI)
- Pulitzer Center
- Public Media Alliance (PMA)
- Raseef22
- Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
- RNW Media
- ROZANA MEDIA
- Samir Kassir Foundation (SKF)
- S.A.F.E. Narratives – Secure Action for Freedom of Expression
- SembraMedia
- Software Freedom Law Center India (SFLC.IN)
- Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression (SCM)
- Tech4Peace Iraq
- The African Editors Forum (TAEF)
- The Transparency, Accountability & Participation (TAP) Network
- Turkey recap
- Wattan Media Network, Palestine
- World Association for Christian Communication (WACC)
- World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA)
- Zambia Free Press Initiative