BOLIVIA
President
Carlos Mesa has completed his first year in office. Mesa, a professional journalist,
took office following a popular uprising that forced his predecessor Gonzalo
Sánchez de Lozada to resign.
Among Mesa's
first acts was to shelve an initiative by Sánchez de Lozada which sought
to regulate the mass media through a state-controlled superintendent. Under
the banner of governmenal decentralization, Mesa considered it urgent and necessary
that a Supreme Decree favoring government transparency and freedom of information
be implemented. It intended to establish full disclosure of information as a
basic principle in a nation marked by years by high incidences of corruption.
Beyond facilitating
journalistic activities, the new law also aimed at providing the public unfettered
access to information that had habitually been restricted, in order that the
right to public information not be considered a luxury.
However,
various professional organizations and civil society have expressed their disagreement
over certain aspects of the Decree, such as barring prosecutors from providing
information on criminal investigations, as well as the decision to classify
information on issues involving the military, the economy, and border integrity,
as well as international negotiations.
The press
has reported on complaints brought before the Bolivian President, presented
in an open letter by the Journalists Confederation and the National Association
of Journalists of Bolivia, motivated by the attitudes of government authorities
at various levels, who have accused the media of an "anti-governmental"
tone.
In addition,
the daily La Patria, located in the city of Oruro, indicated that the television
news reporter, Carmen Torres, was the object of death threats by the Inti Wara
Yassi Community (CIWY) in an attempt to silence her stories denouncing the traffic
in wild animals.
On a number
of occasions, the Journalists Confederation of Bolivia has reported police assaults
against reporters, and demanded assurances that they be free to practice their
profession. Last July, a confrontation—as if between enemies—broke
out between journalists and police. Television news reporter Alex Arias was
assaulted by a Police Major and Arias responded in kind.
The statute
requiring journalists to be university graduates and listed with a National
Registry in order to work remains in effect. While association leaders, the
majority of whom are university graduates in other disciplines, maintain that
this does not preclude working as a journalist, its very existence hinders access
to the media.