The list of "One Free Press Coalition" for the protection of journalists for the current month of July included the names of four Yemenis and Egyptians and the case of the late Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, as part of a list prepared by the coalition for the "most urgent" press cases.

One Free Press Coalition is a unified group of prominent editors and publishers who use their global reach and social platforms, to highlight targeted journalists worldwide.

On the list for this month, Yemeni journalists, Abd al-Khaleq Omran, Akram al-Walidi, Harith Hamid, and Tawfiq al-Mansuri, are languishing in al-Houthi prisons and are condemned to death.

These journalists, who ranked fourth on the list, were accused of spreading false news "in support of the crimes of the Saudi aggression and its allies against the Republic of Yemen."

It was ranked third among the most urgent cases, Egyptian journalist Sulafa Magdy, who has been in prison for nearly six months, and whose news has been cut off since 9 March.

The independent correspondent with her husband is in prison amid "deliberate medical negligence", and at an increased risk of corona infection due to overcrowding and inhuman conditions in Egypt's prisons.

Journalists face charges that a terrorist group participates in its ends, as well as misuse of social media.

It was ranked seventh on the list by Egyptian journalist Mohamed Mounir, who is accused of joining a terrorist group, spreading false news and misusing social media.

Mounir is 65 years old and suffers from diabetes, high blood pressure and serious heart problems.

The tenth place was ranked by the case of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was assassinated at his country's consulate in Istanbul, Turkey in 2018, amid continuous calls to investigate it.