• The Silencing of Daphne (Stephen Grey, Reuters Investigates, 4-17-18. Valletta, Malta) Last October, Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia was assassinated by a car bomb. This is the inside story of a murder that tarnishes Europe. That bombing last October did more than kill Daphne, as she was universally known on the island. It ripped open the dark side of Malta. The brazen assassination and the lawlessness it implies appalled not only Daphne’s friends and family, but also political leaders across Western Europe.
• The Daphne Project: 'Her voice will not be silenced' (Will Fitzgibbon, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, 4-17-18) A team of 45 journalists from 15 countries will continue the work of Malta reporter Daphne Caruana Galizia. Forbidden Stories published stories Caruana Galizia was unable to finish herself.
• The Daphne Project (Wikipedia) is a collaborative, cross-border investigative journalism project by major news organizations from around the world, coordinated by Paris-based investigative non-profit newsroom, Forbidden Stories, to continue the work of Maltese investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia. Their work has been facilitated through the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) , a member of the Global Investigative Journalism Network
• Independent journalism initiatives (Daphne Foundation)
• Forbidden Stories: The Daphne Project
• Daphne Caruana Galizia to be honoured in the US (Times of Malta, 4-7-18) Slain journalist honoured with ASJA's Conscience in Media award
• Mastermind behind Maltese journalist's murder is being protected, says husband ( Juliette Garside and Stephanie Kirchgaessner, The Daphne Project, The Guardian, 4-17-18)
• A bomb silenced Daphne Caruana Galizia. But her investigation lives on (Juliette Garside, The Daphne Project, The Guardian, 4-17-18)
• In Journalist’s Murder, a Test for Malta, and the European Union (Nicholas Kulish, NY Times, 4-17-18) The New York Times assesses the political context for the killing, looking into Malta’s deepening corruption problem and the headache it poses for the European Union.
• Breathing new life into a dead journalist's work (Jon Allsop, CJR, 4-19-18.
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The Daphne Project: 45 journalists will continue the slain Maltese journalist's work
April 23, 2018
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