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IAPA
Midyear Meeting
Casa de Campo
Dominican Republic
March 18, 2002
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Country-by-Country
Reports
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Report by IAPA President Robert
J. Cox
to the Midyear Meeting
Casa de Campo. Dominican Republic
March 18, 2002
The central core of our work - defense of freedom
of the press - continues to be the number one issue on our agenda. We have
made good progress toward the achievement of this goal, but there are still
journalists who continue paying a high price to defend that freedom. In recent
months, eight more journalists have been killed for doing their job.
I especially want to call your attention to the murder of Daniel Pearl, chief
correspondent for South Asia of The Wall Street Journal, who was kidnapped
and then murdered. His name is part of a list of heroes of freedom of the
press that includes Orlando Sierra Hernández and Alvaro Alonso Escobar
of Colombia, Félix Fernández García of Mexico and Brignor
Lindor of Haiti. I would like to ask for a minute of silence in memory of
those slain journalists.
Despite these tragedies, in Guatemala, with the reopening of the Irma Flaquer
case and the acknowledgement by the government of its responsibility, we have
begun to win the battle against impunity - and we not going to stop.
In January, we went to Bolivia where President Jorge Quiroga and Peruvian
President Alejandro Toledo , on an official visit there at the time, together
signed the Declaration of Chapultepec before an audience of more than 1,200.
We welcomed President Quiroga's remarks when he officially announced that
he would make sure that constitutional reforms respect the public's right
to know and other essential measures to protect pres freedom.
In Caracas, we observed a different situation when we arrived there in February
on the next stop in our tour of forums on the Declaration of Chapultepec.
We found the press and journalists under attack. We witnessed threats and
attacks on news services. We saw that legislators that support Chávez
are seeking to introduce laws and mechanisms to control the press, including
a dangerous law on news content. Our agenda in Caracas was pretty extensive
and most of the reporters we met with said they had been threatened and been
subjected to physical and verbal abuse and other attempts at intimidation
by members of the Bolivarian Circles who echo President Chávez's constant
discrediting of the press in his radio addresses and other remarks. Our forum
ended with a poor rating and a demonstration that not one of the 10 principles
of the Declaration of Chapultepec is being complied with in Venezuela. Although
President Chávez refused to meet with our delegation, we made him responsible
for the lack of press freedom in his country.
The IAPA agenda is firm and we are continuing to make progress. We are using
the Declaration of Chapultepec as our principal weapon against attacks on
the press. In the months to come we have scheduled a Hemisphere Conference
in Washington, D.C., to bring judges and journalists together on the issue
of press freedom.
Meanwhile, our central work from our headquarters in Miami is in constant
evolution. We are very thankful for the continuous support of the McCormick
Tribune and Knight Foundations, staunch supporters of our main projects. I
am very thankful to all our members that have been with me on the various
missions. We move all over the hemisphere and our mission and our work reach
wherever we need to defend the basic principle of freedom of the press.
Once again, many thanks for your support. I am convinced that together we
can make a difference in the vital task of defending press freedom.
questions
or comments? e-mail us
Copyright © 2003 Inter American Press Association.
All rights reserved.
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