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    #WhereIsAzory campaign launched to find missing Tanzania journalist

    The Committee to Protect Journalists' #WhereIsAzory campaign launches to highlight the fact that the Tanzanian journalist has been missing for 500 days today, 5 April 2019.
    Still missing: Azory Gwanda.
    Still missing: Azory Gwanda.

    The Committee to Protect Journalists launched the #WhereIsAzory campaign to bring attention to the case of Tanzanian freelance journalist Azory Gwanda, as today marks 500 days since he was last seen.

    The campaign intends to raise awareness about Gwanda and will call on Tanzanian authorities to carry out a credible investigation and publicly account for his fate. Supporters can participate by sharing the hashtags #WhereIsAzory and #MrudisheniAzory on social media.

    "Azory Gwanda is a freelance journalist reporting about his community and he must not become just another statistic," said Angela Quintal, CPJ's Africa program coordinator. "Through this campaign, we want to ensure that Gwanda's case becomes a priority for the Tanzanian authorities and that we get much-needed answers about what really happened him. Until that time, Tanzanian journalists will not feel safe."

    Gwanda was last seen by his family and friends on November 21, 2017, according to CPJ research. Gwanda told his wife, Anna Pinoni, that he was taking an emergency trip, and would return the next day. He has not been seen since.

    In an interview with Mwananchi newspaper, Pinoni said she thought her husband's disappearance might be linked to his work reporting on a series of mysterious killings in Tanzania's Coast region, a view shared by others with whom CPJ has spoken.

    In Tanzania, journalists and media outlets are wary of retaliation if they are too vocal about Gwanda's case. When two CPJ representatives were detained overnight and interrogated in Tanzania last year, they were specifically asked about their interest in Gwanda. His disappearance comes amid declining press freedom in the country, including government-ordered media shutdowns, fines, restrictive regulations, and arbitrary arrests of journalists.

    CPJ Africa will highlight Gwanda's case on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

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