Two Dead in Tragic Shooting Involving Police Officer's Son

A recent study by Freedom House highlights alarming trends in transnational repression, identifying China as the leading perpetrator among 48 governments that engaged in silencing critics abroad from 2014 to 2024. The report documents 1,219 incidents across 103 countries, with China responsible for 272 cases, accounting for 22% of the total.
Transnational repression refers to state-led efforts to intimidate exiled dissidents through tactics like electronic surveillance and physical threats. Countries such as Russia, Turkey, and Egypt also rank high on this list of offenders. High-profile cases include the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi by a Saudi hit squad in 2018 and the poisoning of Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko in the UK in 2006.
The report reveals that Muslims represent 64% of the victims, with Uyghurs particularly targeted due to their ethnicity. Freedom House's research director, Yana Gorokhovskaia, noted that these repression tactics often infiltrate democracies, surprising many who assume such measures are limited to authoritarian regimes.