Trend of Violence against Media in Latin America
Trend of Violence against Media in Latin America
Last
week, a bullet-ridden body was found in a garbage dump on
the
outskirts of Lázaro Cárdenas, a city in the western
state of Michoacán in
Mexico. It belonged to Miguel
Ángel Villagómez Valle, the editor of a
Michoacán
newspaper. He was last seen leaving the office a day
earlier, on
9 October.
Villagómez's paper, "Noticias
de Michoacán", covers extensively the issues
of drug
trafficking, corruption and organised crime - prime reasons
to make
him a target. According to the Committee to
Protect Journalists (CPJ), a
month before his death, he
told his family that he had received a
threatening call
from the Zetas, former soldiers who worked for
the
powerful Gulf drug cartel. He warned his family to be
alert.
Sadly, his case is just the latest in a series of
abductions,
disappearances and murders of journalists in
the past year in Mexico, now
one of the most dangerous
countries in the Americas for journalists and
media
professionals, even surpassing Colombia. During the past
eight years,
at least 24 journalists and media workers
have been killed, eight remain
missing and dozens more
have been threatened, says ARTICLE 19-Mexico.
According to
the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ),
Villagómez
wasn't the only journalist murdered that day.
David García Monroy, a
freelancer who worked with the
newspapers "La Jornada" and "El Diario de
Chihuahua", was
one of 11 people killed when professional killers
burst
into the bar where he was drinking in the northern
city of Chihuahua and
opened fire.
"These latest
murders demonstrate just how urgent is the need to
challenge
impunity, find the killers and bring them to
justice," said IFJ.
Impunity for press crimes constitutes
one of the most alarming
characteristics of the overall
human rights situation in Mexico. Mexico
ranks 10th in
CPJ's Impunity Index, a list of countries where
journalists
are slain on a recurring basis and
governments consistently fail to solve
the crimes.
IFEX
members working in Mexico say it's time for the government
to get
involved. "It is the duty of the state to prevent
and investigate such
occurrences, to punish their
perpetrators and to ensure that victims
receive due
compensation. Whether the perpetrators are organised
crime,
drug lords or any other group acting unlawfully or
even lawfully, the state
is responsible for safeguarding
communicators within its jurisdiction,"
said ARTICLE 19
and the National Center for Social Communication
(CENCOS).
Under current law, state authorities generally
investigate attacks on
journalists. But because of the
poor record of successful prosecutions,
last month the
Mexican Congress promised to present a bill that would
make
crimes against journalists a federal offence - and
ensure federal
investigations into journalists'
murders.
"If this is not done, press freedom will suffer
as investigations of media
killings disintegrate in the
face of local corruption," said IFJ.
With the government
doing little to protect its journalists, press
freedom
groups have started their own campaign against
the brutal and targeted
killing of their colleagues. Just
a week ago, ARTICLE 19 and the
International News Safety
Institute (INSI) launched the first ever
regional
conference - aptly in Mexico City - focusing on
the dangers faced by
journalists in the Americas. More
than 140 delegates got safety guidelines
and training
from editors and journalists from Latin American
hotspots,
including drug-ridden Tijuana in Mexico, the
frontlines of Colombia and the
favelas in
Brazil.
Participants created a national media safety group
specifically for Mexico
to identify practical solutions
to the dangers that journalists and media
professionals
are facing in the country every day. "It is time
for
journalist organisations, media owners and directors
to assume their role
in demanding the level of safety
needed to truly exercise press freedom,"
said ARTICLE 19.
"The core demands have to come from within."
At its
General Assembly earlier this month, the Inter American
Press
Association (IAPA) observed four major press
freedom trends in Latin
America: the worsening of
relations between governments and the press;
the
inappropriate government use of public funds to
pressure and discriminate
against the media by granting
or withholding advertising; the approval of
freedom of
information laws, such as in Guatemala and Chile; and
more
incidents of violence against journalists.
Eight
journalists have been killed in Latin America this year
alone, says
IAPA, which does not include the deaths last
week. If the current climate
of impunity and drug-related
violence in Mexico is anything to go by, Latin
America's
press freedom situation doesn't look like it will improve
anytime
soon.
ENDS