KEY POINTS
  • The New York Times is pulling its journalists out of Russia for now due to safety concerns and a harsh new censorship law passed after that country's invasion of Ukraine.
  • The move comes after a number of other media outlets, including CNN and Bloomberg News, said they will no longer issue reports from Russia because of the threat of being prosecuted.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law that threatens journalists with up to 15 years in prison for spreading what the law euphemistically refers to as "false information" about that invasion.
The New York Times Building in New York City on February 1, 2022.

The New York Times is temporarily pulling its journalists out of Russia due to safety concerns and a harsh new censorship law passed after that country's invasion of Ukraine, the newspaper said Tuesday.

The move comes after a number of other Western media outlets, including CNN, Bloomberg News and the BBC, had said they will no longer issue reports from Russia because of the threat of being prosecuted for covering the attack. The BBC said Tuesday that after "careful deliberation" it would resume English language reporting from Russia on Tuesday evening.