EL SALVADOR
Conditions
for the free exercise of journalism have improved since Elías Antonio
Saca, a radio station owner and past president of the International Association
of Broadcasting (IAB, Spanish acronym AIR), became president of the nation.
Since June
1, journalists have had easy access to the executive offices of the president
and to the President himself. A newly-established Communications Secretariat
is an integral part of the new Administration.
During this
period, several agencies of the legal system brought increased pressures to
bear on a number of journalists from La Prensa Gráfica.
Investigators
from the National Civil Police (PNC), agents of the Attorney General’s
Office, defense attorneys and judges all have subpoenaed journalists to appear
at trials and off-the-record meetings, or to be deposed as witnesses even though
not one of the journalists in question was either an eye-witness or an ear-witness
to any crime.
Some ten journalists were summoned to appear before legal authorities and reveal
the identities of their sources.
In September,
a reporter covering the judicial affairs beat for La Prensa Gráfica was
subpoenaed to testify publicly in the trial of a dangerous gang of kidnappers
and assailants known as the Tacoma Cabrera Gang; the gang leader has been sentenced
to more than 200 years in prison.
The judge for the First Criminal Court for Sentencing of San Salvador, Saúl
Ernesto Morales, also issued a summons and threatened to have the reporter arrested
and tried on criminal charges if he failed to show up to testify. The judge
never gave a reason for the summons, despite repeated news media requests for
an explanation. The reporter had to obey and testify in the presence of gang
members, without any protection whatsoever.
There is
a lingering threat of aggression from leaders of the extreme-left party FMLN,
who insulted reporters covering their meetings during the recent presidential
campaign. FMLN Secretary General Shafick Jorge Handal filed suit against journalist
Moisés Urbina of TCS, who had reported the results of a poll that was
negative for Handal.
Another
positive development was that a libel and defamation suit against the editor-in-chief
and two main editors of El Diario de Hoy was dropped and the charges shown to
be spurious. The suit had been brought by a Canadian company linked in documents
from the Canadian Department of Justice to mafia groups that run a solid waste
treatment plant in the capital in association with city governments controlled
by the FMLN. A court dismissed all charges against the journalists this past
April.
Several local governments controlled by the FMLN also imposed illegal levies
on private radio stations by taxing radio broadcast towers operating on private
property. These levies are illegal given that only the Legislative Assembly
has authority to impose new taxes. Also, the local authorities did not provide
any public service in return.
Some political parties want to amend the existing press act, which enables newspapers
to charge readers low prices by exempting the newspapers from some taxes on
raw materials. The parties in question are opposition parties that see their
power to change the law as a way to exert pressure on newspapers.