IAPA Midyear Meeting
Casa de Campo
Dominican Republic
March 18, 2002


Country-by-Country Reports

Argentina Aruba Bolivia Brazil Canada Caribbean
Chile Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Dominican Rep Ecuador
El Salvador USA Guatemala Haiti Honduras Mexico
Nicaragua Panama Paraguay Peru Porto Rico Uruguay
Venezuela          

GUATEMALA

WHEREAS

there is a deliberate state policy to discredit the independent press and limit journalists' access to sources amid a climate of confrontation and threats

WHEREAS

Congress approved a Licensing Law that threatens press freedom and is studying changes to laws that also would restrict the fundamental principles guaranteed by the Constitution and recorded in the Declaration of Chapultepec and especially the American Convention on Human Rights

WHEREAS

Threats and attacks on reporters and columnists have been reported and it is feared that they may constitute a campaign to intimidate the press in general because of its reports about corruption in the government

WHEREAS

Principle 4 of the Declaration of Chapultepec establishes that "[f]reedom of expression and of the press are severely limited by murder, terrorism, kidnapping, pressure, intimidation, the unjust imprisonment of journalists, the destruction of facilities, violence of any kind and impunity for perpetrators; [s]uch acts must be investigated promptly and punished harshly"

WHEREAS

Principle 5 of the Declaration of Chapultepec establishes that "[p]rior censorship, restrictions on the circulation of the media or dissemination of their reports, forced publication of information, the imposition of obstacles to the free flow of news, and restrictions on the activities and movements of journalists directly contradict freedom of the press"

WHEREAS

Principle 8 of the Declaration of Chapultepec establishes that "the membership of journalists in guilds, their affiliation to professional and trade associations and the affiliation of the media with business groups must be strictly voluntary"


THE MIDYEAR MEETING OF THE IAPA RESOLVES

to ask Congress, as a way to strengthen democratic principles, not to introduce or approve any legislation that could restrict press freedom

to demand that the president respect journalists' work, end confrontational rhetoric and the policy of disparaging the press and that he encourage the investigation of reports of threats and attacks on reporters and columnists

to urge the Constitutional Court to ratify as soon as possible its ruling against obligatory licensing of journalists in accordance with Guatemalan legislation and international agreements signed by Guatemala that guarantee press freedom without licensing or censorship.




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Reports & Resolutions


58th IAPA General Assembly
JW Marriott Hotel & Stellaris Casino

Lima, Peru
October 26-29, 2002