|
|
|
IAPA
Midyear Meeting
Casa de Campo
Dominican Republic
March 18, 2002
|
|
|
|
Country-by-Country
Reports
|
BOLIVIA
The crisis affecting all parts of Bolivian society,
and especially the written media, caused the closing of the newspapers Presencia
and Ultima Hora in La Paz.
During the social unrest, the media published news without government restrictions
although there were some attacks on journalists by union members, farmers,
police officers and military people.
There were attacks on journalists and the media in the tropical area of Cochabamba,
where illegal coca is eradicated and which is considered a military operation
zone.
In the legal area, changes to the Constitution promoted by the executive and
legislative branches include several articles damaging press freedom.
At the end of September a group of journalists from the city of Cochabamba,
who had traveled to the Chapare area to get information about the siege of
a military base by coca-growing farmers, were attacked by military men. Bolivian
army snipers fired over the heads of the journalists and fired chemical gases
to prevent the journalists from approaching the base. A farmer near the journalists
was shot, and he died 20 minutes later.
The journalists were in the zone to get information and check the condition
of the farmer siege. The ombudsman, Ana María Romero, said a representative
she sent to the zone to investigate the incident could not enter the base
and was only able to converse with the officers from 200 yards away. Nevertheless,
Romero made it clear that under international humanitarian law the military
should not fire on unarmed civilians.
Up to this point, neither the armed forces nor the police have detained the
person responsible for this death. On October 29, 2001, the farmers' radio
station Soberanía de la Coca (Sovereignty of Coca) in Villa Tunari
in the tropical area of Cochabamba was ordered by the prosecutor's office
to identify the person or persons who had ordered announcements calling for
violence and those who authorized their broadcast under threat of shutting
down the station. "This is a union radio station and all we do is publicize
what is decided in assemblies," the station's news director, René
Lamí, said. The station's representatives called the legal action judicial
harassment and intimidation.
Soberanía de la Coca did not comply with the legal demand, and the
public prosecutor's office ordered a military-police unit to confiscate its
equipment to prevent it from continuing its broadcasts. The vice minister
of social defense who runs the nation's anti-drug effort said the Telecommunications
Authority should cancel the licenses of broadcast stations that encourage
subversion. According to Oswaldo Antezana, Bolivia's "drug czar,"
Radio Soberanía, the "Voice of the Coca Growers" in Chapare,
deserved prosecution because it was involved in broadcasting subversive messages.
On January 22, 2002, the Telecommunications Authority closed Radio Soberanía
de la Coca, owned by the Farmers' Federation because it had no license. The
minister, Mauro Bertero, confirmed the takeover of the radio station in the
town of Chipiriri and the participation of the public prosecutor's office
in an operation authorized by an administrative decision issued December 14,
2001. The regulatory agency waited a month and a half before carrying out
the decision just when the unrest in the zone was getting worse. Guido Loayza,
the superintendent of telecommunications, said the station's equipment was
seized by its staff, and added that this type of action has always been conducted
by law enforcement agencies. The station was one of 72 radio stations seized
by the Telecommunications Authority. The government, however, overturned the
suspension of Radio Soberanía during the second week of February. It
was authorized to resume operations under the condition that its programs
comply with certain regulations, that it obtain a license and that it change
its name because there is a station in Tarija with the same name.
In February of 2002 several journalists in the city of Cochabamba were attacked
by police during demonstrations by coca-growers.
A bill called the Law on the Necessity of Constitutional Reform drafted by
the Citizens' Commission for Reform of the Constitution, which will be debated
in the National Congress, has at least two articles that violate press freedom
and the right of press confidentiality. It involves enforcement of the right
of habeas data which requires journalists to make public "the source
of a news item that could be seen as violating the rights and guarantees in
the constitution." But the initiative journalists are most concerned
about is the proposed Article 25 which at least is contradictory, since on
the one hand it guarantees press freedom and on the other it prohibits confidential
sources which in some cases have disclosed important cases of corruption.
The existing Press Law says in Article 8, "Secrecy in press matters is
inviolable." And Article 9 underlines that "the publisher or printer
who discloses confidential information to a political authority or a private
individual without the order of a judge has criminal responsibility for violating
the public trust under the Penal Code." However, the new bill proposes
in Article 20 (new) that "I. Any person who believes he has been improperly
or illegally prevented from learning about, objecting to or obtaining elimination
or correction of personal information or inexact or false information that
may be in public or private files or databases that affect the rights and
guarantees recognized by this constitution may request the right of habeas
data before the proper judicial authority." II. "The procedure of
the appeal to habeas data will be the same established for constitutional
appeal in Article 9." Confidential sources. The text of Article 26 orders
that "I. Press freedom is guaranteed." "Censorship is forbidden"
"II. "Secrecy is not allowed." "The law regulates the
right to the conscience clause and the right to confidential sources in the
free exercise of journalism." "III. The rights of reply and correction
are guaranteed." "IV. The government may not pass laws, decrees
or decisions that limit or restrict freedom of expression by any media outlet."
Despite the media's opposition, the legislature passed changes in the Electoral
Code, and they were put into effect by the executive branch without paying
attention to journalists' demands to overturn them or to retain in its earlier
text articles 114 and 119 which regulate the times of publication of political
advertising and the fees charged for it.
A lawsuit has been filed in the Constitutional Court alleging that these articles
are unconstitutional. Meetings have been held between owners of media outlets
and legislators to draft new articles to be discussed and approved in parliament,
but the negotiations have not yet had a positive outcome.
Article 114 says the election campaign shall begin the day after the official
announcement calling elections and will end 24 hours before the day of the
elections. It says it can only begin 90 days before the election and end 24
hours before Election Day.
Article 119 says "all media outlets are required to register through
their legal representative at the National Electoral Court their programs,
times and hours as well as their fees during the period of election advertising.
These fees cannot in any case be more than the average commercial fees charged
during the first quarter of the year before the election and must be registered
in the National Electoral Court and the state electoral courts at least 180
days before the date of the national election."
The National Electoral Court will publish the list of media outlets authorized
to carry political advertising 15 days after the call for elections. Political
parties that buy political advertising in unauthorized media outlets will
be fined the equivalent of double the amount of the average fee registered
in the National Electoral Court for the time and space used.
The purchase of time and space in the press, radio and television for political
advertising is recognized as the exclusive right of political parties. Candidates
may only use the times assigned to them by the political party or alliance.
Finally, the murder of Juan Carlos Encimas, on July 19, 2001, has not been
solved.
Preguntas ó Comentarios? escríbanos
© 2002 Sociedad
Interamericana de Prensa. Todos los derechos reservados.
|
|
|