NED Announces Recipients of the 2026 Democracy Award

Washington, D.C. — The National Endowment for Democracy (NED) is pleased to announce the recipients of its 2026 Democracy Awards, which honor individuals and organizations from Burma, Ethiopia, Syria, Russia, and Cuba for their courage and leadership in advancing democratic freedoms in their communities.  

To mark America’s 250th anniversary, NED’s Board of Directors selected winners championing the fundamental freedoms enshrined in the First Amendment—freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition—which shaped the founding of the United States and continue to inspire freedom movements around the world today. The 2026 Democracy Awards honorees are: 

  • Friede Allen, whose support for Russian anti-war clergy has helped preserve a moral witness against the Kremlin’s war in Ukraine and its effort to turn religious doctrine into an instrument of state power.  
  • Imprisoned Cubans Félix Navarro, Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, and Maykel Castillo Pérez, whose courage as political prisoners and dissident artists has challenged the Cuban regime’s control over public expression, inspired wider civic participation, and exposed the fear behind the state’s censorship. 
  • The Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression, which has helped Syrians reclaim the right to be heard after five decades of brutal dictatorship by documenting abuses, defending civic space, and pressing new state institutions for accountability.  
  • The Addis Standard in Ethiopia, whose high-impact independent reporting has brought vital facts to light on underreported conflict situations, despite severe access restrictions, state repression, and even targeted attacks. 
  • The pro-democracy community organizers of Burma’s Spring Revolution, for sustaining civic participation and community resilience.

“The yearning for freedom that launched our nation 250 years ago remains one of the most powerful forces in the world today,” said NED Board Chairman Peter Roskam. “This year’s honorees embody the courage and persistence required to defend those rights in their own communities. Their work reminds us that America’s commitment to liberty is strongest when we stand with those carrying that promise forward.”

NED will honor the 2026 Democracy Awards recipients during a ceremony at George Washington’s Mount Vernon this September.  

About NED’s Democracy Awards: The Democracy Award is presented annually by NED’s Board of Directors to individuals and organizations whose courage and commitment have advanced human freedom, strengthened democratic institutions, and defended fundamental rights in the face of repression around the world. The award is a replica of the Goddess of Democracy erected during China’s 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.  

About the National Endowment for Democracy: NED is a private, nonprofit foundation dedicated to advancing freedom and democracy worldwide. Established in 1983 as part of President Reagan’s vision to foster an “infrastructure of democracy” with a bipartisan Congressional mandate, NED supports grassroots leaders striving for the freedom to think, speak, worship, engage politically, and support their families without fear. It mobilizes key pillars of American democracy, from political parties to business and labor, to support their counterparts abroad through the Core institutes that form the NED family: the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute, the Center for International Private Enterprise, and the Solidarity Center.

MEDIA CONTACT 

Carolyn Stewart, Director of External Communications, carolyns@ned.org

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