Piraeus Deputy Mayor Files Lawsuit Against Solomon Over Real Estate Investigation
Source: Solomon
Greece-based GIJN member Solomon and three of its journalists face legal action from a deputy mayor in the Greek port city of Piraeus, following their investigation into a real estate development project. Dimitris Arapis, responsible for urban planning and construction in Piraeus, has filed a lawsuit, injunction request, and criminal complaint, including a demand to take down the investigation. The investigation examined a large development that includes hundreds of apartments, offices, shops, and commercial spaces in a former industrial area in Piraeus, as well as possible potential conflict of interest issues related to Arapis’ public role and private work for the developer.
Anti-Corruption Reporting Grant for Journalists Based in Montenegro and Kosovo
Source: BIRN
Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) has opened a call for independent journalists based in Kosovo and Montenegro to apply for grants to support investigations into corruption and accountability issues. Journalists can get grants of up to US$1,500, as well as mentoring and technical and editorial support. The program, which supports journalists investigating issues related to governance, misuse of public resources, and institutional accountability, is led by the Society Against Corruption in Montenegro and Kosovo, a regional anti-corruption initiative and grant program implemented by BIRN and Civic Alliance (CA). The deadline for applications is June 7, 2026.
Open Call: CORRECTIV’s Residency Program for Exiled Journalists
Source: CORRECTIV
German investigative newsroom CORRECTIV has announced its 2026 Exile Journalist-in-Residence Program, which supports journalists forced into exile by persecution related to their work. The program “provides what many lose in exile: a professional newsroom, trusted colleagues, technical infrastructure, and public visibility within a safe environment,” states CORRECTIV. The six-month residency in Berlin — from July to December 2026 — will be offered to two journalists, who will work alongside exiled and investigative journalists and pursue their own projects, and have access to workspaces, studios, publishing platforms, and public-facing formats.
Alicia Patterson Investigative Journalism Fellowship 2027
Source: Fund for Investigative Journalism
Applications are open for the Fund for Investigative Journalism’s Alicia Patterson Fellowship 2027, which runs for six (paying US$20,000) or 12 months (paying US$40,000) for in-depth written reporting. Proposals are due October 1 every year, with decisions made in January. The Fellowships are designed to support significant, in-depth written reporting on subjects of public interest. Projects must be for print or online publications (in text format) and must be US-focused — fellows aren’t required to live in the US, but the reporting project must be focused on the US and for publication in US-based outlets.
Sir Harry Evans Global Fellowship 2027
Source: Durham University
Applications are open for the Sir Harry Evans Global Fellowship, a nine-month fellowship with Durham University in the UK and Reuters, and a prestigious opportunity for an early-career journalist to produce an investigative project. The Fellow gets mentorship from Reuters editors and access to Durham University’s research resources, and will work on the project from inside a Reuters newsroom in London, New York, Sydney, or Toronto. The Fellowship comes with a monthly salary of around £4,444 per month (US$6,040 ), plus a living stipend and travel expenses. Applicants should have between 2-5 years’ professional journalism experience. Deadline: July 10, 2026.
GIJN Expresses Solidarity with GFMD Over RightsCon Cancellation
Source: Global Forum for Media Development
The Global Investigative Journalism Network, along with more than 100 other press, civil society, and human rights organizations, signed a statement of solidarity with the Global Forum of Media Development, condemning the Zambian government over its abrupt cancellation of RightsCon 2026. As GFMD notes, the Zambian Ministry of Technology and Science's last-minute decision to bow to foreign pressure and scuttle the event is just the latest attack on the cause of equality, transparency, and accountability. "These developments take place in an already challenging context of shrinking liberties and funding for journalism, digital rights, and free expression communities worldwide," GFMD wrote in its statement.
Russia Demands Apple and Google Remove Investigative Outlet IStories From App Stores
Source: OCCRP
The Russian state media and internet agency, Roskomnadzor, has sent formal demands to Apple and Google for the removal of the app for IStories — an independent investigative new site that has published reporting on political corruption and the realities of the war in Ukraine. Roskomnadzor accused the outlet of “spreading fakes” and destabilizing the country. IStories launched the app — designed to circumvent widespread website blocking in Russia — in February 2026. The outlet posted on social media to tell its audience to download the app before the tech companies could potentially comply with the removal orders.
Tunisian Investigative Outlet Inkyfada Threatened with Closure
Source: RSF
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has condemned the Tunisian authorities’ crackdown on the independent press, including a suspension and funds being withheld from investigative news site and GIJN member Inkyfada. On May 11, 2026, the Tunis Court of First Instance will examine a request to dissolve Al Khatt, the association that runs Inkyfada. “The dissolution proceedings brought against Inkyfada is an act of institutional censorship,” said Oussama Bouagila, director of RSF North Africa, calling for the procedure to be dropped. Al Khatt, which has managed the investigative platform since 2014, has been subject to mounting pressure since 2023.
I.F. Stone Medal for Journalistic Independence Goes to Mexican Jouralist Alfredo Corchado
Source: Nieman Foundation
The 2026 I.F.Stone Medal, an award administered by the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University that recognizes journalistic independence and honors the life of investigative journalist I.F. Stone, has been awarded to Alfredo Corchado, executive editor of the Puente News Collaborative. The award recognizes Corchado's work directing Puente’s innovative approach to reporting along both sides of the US-Mexico border. Puente News Collaborative is a bilingual journalism nonprofit based in El Paso, Texas. It connects independent journalists to newsrooms in the US and Mexico, and its network includes more than two dozen publishing partners.
US$25,000 Grants for Freelance Investigative Reporters and Editors
Source: Freelance Investigative Reporters & Editors
Freelance Investigative Reporters & Editors (FIRE) is offering US$25,000 Greenlight Grants to support investigative reporting that uncovers information in the public interest, done exclusively by freelance investigative journalists who are not formally attached to any newsroom, news site, or outlet. FIRE Greenlight Grants are designed to reward “best practices in the engagement of freelance reporters,” and co-awarded publishers or broadcasters receive 20% of the grant. To be eligible for the FIRE Greenlight Grants, an outlet must promise in writing to cover defamation-related legal expenses as long as the applicant reports responsibly.