Pavel Butorin, MA 鈥98, director of Current Time TV at , is a journalist and advocate tirelessly working to ensure free access to information across the globe.
Butorin and his wife, journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, will receive the World Press Freedom Award on May 6 for their unrelenting advocacy for press freedom. The honor individuals who 鈥渟tand with victims of hostage-taking, fight for the freedom of the unjustly detained, defend press freedom, and serve our nation with excellence and integrity.鈥
In 2023, Kurmasheva was imprisoned in Russia, where she stayed for nearly 400 days before her release in 2024. Butorin, with the support of the James W. Foley Foundation, brought her home in a complex multinational prisoner exchange.
鈥淭he foundation advocates for Americans wrongfully detained abroad, and it also promotes journalists鈥 safety worldwide,鈥 Butorin said. 鈥淚'm lucky to have this organization support me.鈥
In addition to feeling lucky to have the foundation鈥檚 support, Butorin said he is honored to be presented with this award.
鈥淚 feel incredibly humbled to be awarded this honor because past awardees 鈥 they're all very courageous, intrepid journalists who worked in high-risk zones, dangerous situations, war zones,鈥 he said.
Butorin said he looks forward to interacting with the community at the May ceremony in Washington, D.C.
鈥淭he event itself, the Foley Freedom Awards, is very special also because it happens at the , which is very nonpartisan,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t really brings together people of all walks of life. Policy makers, activists, journalists.鈥
Butorin and Kurmasheva continue to advocate for the release of Americans and journalists wrongfully imprisoned in foreign countries, in addition to helping ensure global access to unbiased information, work that Butorin credits his telecommunications training at OHIO with preparing him for.
OU didn't just educate me, It was really a pathway for me, and it showed me the kind of society I wanted to help build.
鈥淚 think that 91自拍 was where I first learned about unbiased and uncensored journalism and free speech,鈥 Butorin said. 鈥淭hose weren't just abstract concepts for me because I had grown up in Soviet Russia, where the government controlled the media, and at OU I saw something different.鈥
The connection to OHIO and the Scripps College of Communication helped Butorin and his wife long after his graduation. He said that Dean Scott Titsworth was among the first to write a letter to then-Senator Sherrod Brown requesting that Kurmasheva鈥檚 situation be designated as wrongful detention.
鈥淭hat was very important for us at the time,鈥 Butorin said. 鈥淚t was that kind of institutional support that showed our family that we weren't alone.鈥
This institutional support continues as Butorin and Kurmasheva receive their award.
鈥淭he Scripps College is so happy that Pavel is receiving this recognition,鈥 Titsworth said. 鈥淥ver the course of his career and certainly as a result of his partner鈥檚 detention in Russia, Pavel has championed the importance of a free and vibrant press. His work as director of Current Time TV and Digital has emphasized news gathering and information even in countries where censorship and intimidation is the norm.鈥
Butorin, with his work and recognition, adds to the long list of award-winning OHIO alumni across the globe. He illustrates the power of the Bobcat network and an education in Athens.
鈥淥U didn't just educate me,鈥 Butorin said. 鈥淚t was really a pathway for me, and it showed me the kind of society I wanted to help build.鈥