Audio By Carbonatix
A judge in the US has ruled that the effective closure of the Voice of America (VOA) last year was "illegal" and that hundreds of its journalists should be reinstated.
District Court Judge Royce Lamberth has given authorities one week to restore the international broadcaster's service.
The VOA was set up during World War Two to counter Nazi propaganda.
Just weeks after returning to office as president, Donald Trump issued an executive order to close the broadcaster, which his officials accused of left-wing bias. Trump also ordered outlets such as Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia to be "eliminated to the maximum extent consistent with applicable law".
The president appointed Kari Lake to head the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM) - the parent company that oversees and funds the VOA, as well as Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia.
Lake proceeded to sack more than 85% of the agency's employees - more than 1,000 staff at VOA alone - leaving just a handful of employees in their jobs.
Most have been on paid administrative leave since last year, including Persian Service reporters who were called back to work after Israel attacked Iran last June.
Last week, Judge Lamberth ruled that Lake lacked the authority to order the suspension of the USAGM workforce because she had not been confirmed by the US Senate.
In Tuesday's ruling, the federal judge described the decision to sack the journalists as "arbitrary and capricious," adding that the government had not taken into account legislation that determines what languages and regions the VOA must serve.
"Defendants have provided nothing approaching a principled basis for their decision," Lamberth wrote.
Three VOA journalists had sued the Trump administration. One of them, Patsy Widakuswara, said she was deeply grateful for the judge's decision.
"We hope the American people will continue to support our mission to produce journalism, not propaganda," she told the Associated Press news agency.
It is not clear whether Lake's nominated successor, Sarah Rogers, whose appointment requires Senate confirmation, will appeal.
Before being wound down, the VOA broadcast TV, radio and digital content in almost 50 languages.
Trump's criticisms of the VOA form part of his broader attacks against the US media, which studies suggest American news consumers view as highly polarised.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana handed tough heat as World Relays quest begins in Botswana
13 minutes -
Don’t sit aloof when SOEs are mismanaged -Mahama urges TUC
14 minutes -
Ghana Music Awards-USA unveils 2026 nominees in Kumasi
32 minutes -
Mahama defends Special Prosecutor, says there is space for strong prosecutorial powers
36 minutes -
From this year, persons indicted in A-G’s report will be prosecuted – Mahama
44 minutes -
OMCs begin fuel price cuts as Star Oil and Goil sell petrol at GH¢13.25
54 minutes -
Two dead, 4 arrested as police bust robbery gang in Upper East
59 minutes -
We’re finalising new Labour Law to protect every worker in the gig economy and beyond – Mahama
1 hour -
Mali at the Crossroads: Sovereignty without Stability?
1 hour -
Watch how the Bank of Ghana recorded a GH¢15.6 billion loss in 2025, its 2nd largest loss since 2008
2 hours -
Mahama announces Independent Emoluments Commission to overhaul public sector pay and pension review
2 hours -
Economic stability only foundational, the real task is to build a better life for our people – Prez Mahama
2 hours -
May Day: We’re almost at crisis level on jobs – Organised Labour tells gov’t
2 hours -
FH Depot’s Freda Donkor honoured as top FMCG distribution CEO at Ghana Titans Awards
2 hours -
Decent jobs for youth remain priority under Reset Ghana Agenda – Mahama
2 hours