Uznews.net was an independent Uzbek news website that operated from 2005 to 2014. As of 2010, it had been blocked by the Uzbek government for several years.[1]
The website's editor-in-chief is Galima Bukharbaeva, an Uzbek journalist known for her eyewitness coverage of the 2005 Andijan massacre;[2] she later won the International Press Freedom Award of the Committee to Protect Journalists.[3]
Uznews.net reporter Salijon Abdurahmanov was arrested during a traffic stop on 7 June 2008, who searched his car and stated that they found 114 grams (4.0 oz) of marijuana and 5 grams (0.18 oz) of opium in his trunk.[4][5] Abdurahmanov stated that the drugs had been planted in retaliation for an uznews.net story he had recently published about alleged corruption of traffic police.[5] He was found guilty and sentenced to ten years in prison in October 2008.[5] The conviction drew protests from a number of Western-based human rights organizations, including Amnesty International (which named him a prisoner of conscience),[6] Human Rights Watch,[7] the Committee to Protect Journalists,[8] the International Federation for Human Rights,[9] and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.[10]
As of December 20, 2014, the news site is shut down and all links redirect to the following message in Uzbek, Russian, and English:
Uznews.net has ceased to exist.
We thank all our readers for having been with us and a separate thank you to the most faithful who are logging in now. We are touched.
Uznews.net Team (January 2005 - December 2014)
A tribute article by Reporters Without Borders stated that the email of editor-in-chief Galima Bukharbayeva was hacked and confidential information identifying independent journalists who contributed to UzNews.net was leaked to the public.[11] While all of the content has been taken down from the site, it is still accessible from the Internet Archive.