Johannes Decat (1993-2025) was a Belgian investigative journalist and writer.

He was primarily interested in political resistance in all its forms. His knowledge of Arabic, Turkish, Spanish, French and Russian proved invaluable.

His articles have appeared in MO* Magazine, Apache, Knack, Zawia3 and Daraj, among others. He was open to have his sleeve pulled up for multidisciplinary collaborations.

Photo: © Glenn Minten

Johannes Decat

Info

Name
Johannes Decat - in memoriam
Title
Writer & journalist
Expertise
Political Resistance in the Middle-East
Country
Belgium
City
Gent

Supported projects

When the pomegranates ripen

  • Armed conflict
  • Culture

JEREVAN - For Armenians, the pomegranate symbolises the invincibility of the Armenian spirit. Pomegranates begin to ripen in September. Their skin dries up while the flesh becomes moist.

Healing

  • Armed conflict
  • Politics
  • Youth

UKRAINE - Is there room for healing and recovery in the midst of wartime? With that question, photographer Emiel Petrovitch and writer Johannes Decat traveled to Ukraine. Their answers are contained in a series of articles.

Hashtags in the battle for women's bodies in Egypt

CAÏRO - Those who hoped the 2011 Egyptian revolution would dramatically improve women's lives are being disappointed. More than a decade later, calls for equal rights and opportunities are ringing louder than ever. Social media are once again an ideal sounding board for emancipatory ideas. And the regime? As ever, it reacts defensively. Whoever does not go along with the official discourse on women's rights is gagged.'

On the other side of the bars: the broken families of al-Sisi's Egypt

  • Human Rights
  • Justice

CAIRO - This year, Egypt is hosting the international climate summit COP27. An African first of symbolic importance, but international organisations like Amnesty International point to the serious abuses in Egyptian prisons. They see the Egyptian presidency as an attempt to polish the regime's image before the international community.