Whistleblower advocates are expressing renewed concerns about threats to press freedom after Chelsea Manning was jailed for refusing to testify in a secret grand jury hearing.

Manning appeared last week before a grand jury believed to be investigating WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange. Manning refused to answer questions under oath and was thrown in jail Friday after a contempt hearing, where she shall stay “until she purges or the end of the life of the grand jury,” said U.S. District Judge Claude Hilton.

“This ruling is clearly a punitive measure against Chelsea Manning, who had already testified at length during her court martial in 2013 about the information she shared with WikiLeaks,” said Daphne Pellegrino, advocacy officer for Reporters Without Borders’s (RSF) North America bureau, in an alert sent to supporters on Monday.

“Rulings like these pose a grave threat to press freedom in the United States, where the bravery of whistleblowers like Manning inform some of the nation’s most impactful reporting. Whistleblowers must not be treated as criminals, and instead must be recognized for their critical role in maintaining a thriving democracy,” she continued.

Manning was promised immunity for her testimony, but as the Associated Press noted, that “eliminates her ability to invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.”

In a statement she released Friday, Manning said, “The grand jury’s questions pertained to disclosures from nine years ago, and took place six years after an in-depth computer forensics case, in which I tesified [sic] for almost a full day about these events. I stand by my previous public testimony.”

Manning’s already spent extensive time behind bars. In 2013 she was given a 35-year sentence for leaking documents exposing U.S. war crimes to WikiLeaks—an act she’s repeatedly said she took of her own accord. President Barack Obama commuted her sentence in 2017 after she spent seven years in jail. 

What’s happening “is really a grave threat to press freedom: the attempt to make it a felony to publish classified material—which is what WikiLeaks did,” argued journalist Glenn Greenwald.

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