Sakharov 2025: Europe against censorship

November 2025

SAKHAROV 2025: EUROPE AGAINST CENSORHIP

November 2025

Editos/Fondemos’ view

FONDEMOS’ VIEW

By honoring Andrzej Poczobut and Mzia Amaghlobeli, the 2025 Sakharov Prize sends a strong message of international solidarity in the face of Russian authoritarism.

In Belarus, Andrzej Poczobut, correspondent for the daily newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza (the Electoral Gazette), is serving an eight-year sentence for “undermining national security” after covering pro-democracy protests and denouncing the repression of Alyaksandr Lukashenko’s regime. In Georgia, Mzia Amaghlobeli, founder of independent media outlets, was sentenced to two years in prison after being arrested in connection with a protest, a case that raises questions about the state of freedom of expression in a country undergoing democratic decline.

This award reinforces the message to authoritarian regimes: you cannot silence the truth without it finding other ways to be heard. In Belarus, where more than 400 political prisoners are still being held, including several journalists, media repression has intensified since the 2020 protests. Andrzej Poczobut, an iconic figure in the independent press, embodies this resistance to information controlled by the regime of Lukashenko, a staunch ally of the Kremlin.

In Georgia, Mzia Amaghlobeli represents a press under constant strain, in a country where nearly 75% of journalists reported in 2023 that they had been subjected to political or economic pressure in the past two years, according to the Georgian Charter of Journalistic Ethics. This authoritarian drift directly threatens the country’s European integration.

 

“Freedom has a face, and today, it is the faces of Andrzej Poczobut and Mzia Amaghlobeli. This decision by the European Parliament sends a powerful message: to dictators, that truth cannot be imprisoned; and to political prisoners, that they are not forgotten.” Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya

 

Beyond being a gesture of recognition, the Sakharov Prize calls for collective responsibility: ensuring that freedom of the press remains an active pillar of European democracy. In the face of Russia’s information warfare, defending a free media space is no longer a symbolic gesture, but a strategy for democratic resilience.

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