Attached are reports
from various countries of the region, giving more details about the main
incidents that have occurred in the past three months.
Major developments affecting
press freedom
in the Americas from April 2000 to date
Argentina:
The daily El Liberal of Santiago del Estero complained that on at least
two occasions its telephones were tapped. The most recent occurrence, on
July 5, coincided with publication of reports about irregularities in the
call for bids and later delivery of public housing. Following the reports,
the government took reprisals against this other critical media by withdrawing
of
0ficial advertising.
Distributors in Santiago del Estero of the La Voz del Interior of Córdoba
were threatened by supporters of the state governor after the paper criticized
him. In another incident in May, a mob burned most of the press run of the
daily La Gaceta of Tucumán in northern Argentina and destroyed several
distribution centers.
Bolivia:
Ronald Méndez Alpire, a reporter who has produced a number of investigative
reports on corruption and drug trafficking, was shot and injured by an unidentified
assailant.
In April, acting under a state of emergency, the Army shut down radio and
television broadcasts for three hours. Several journalists and media workers
received anonymous threats.
Brazil:
The Chamber of Deputies in March threw out a provision in the Proposed Constitutional
Amendment for reform of the judiciary of the press law bill that would prohibit
public officials, police officers, district attorneys, public prosecutors,
judges and officers of the courts from providing information to the press.
The bill, seen as a gag law, is now due to be sent to the Senate.
The Federal Senates Constitution and Justice Committee on June 7 approved
a bill to ban cigarette and liquor advertising in all news media. The bill
now goes to the Senate and Chamber of Deputies.
Chile:
The legislature on May 16 threw out a bill for a press law that sought to
remove the protection from libel action that politicians and public officials
enjoy. The bill included proposed provisions on the right to rectification
and clarification, greater access to information and elimination of privileges
granted to the authorities under the State Security Law.
Colombia:
A wave of violence against individual journalists and the media continues.
Murder, kidnapping and forced exile have became almost routine for the press.
On July 4, journalist Marisol Revelo Barón was murdered in Tumaco,
Nariño province. El Espectador reporter Jineth Bedoya Lima was kidnapped
on May 25 and beaten up before being freed. Also kidnapped was Guillermo
Cortés of the radio news program "Hora Cero." Several journalists
went into exile, among them Ignacio Gómez of El Espectador, Francisco
Santos of El Tiempo, María Alejandra González Mosquera and
Mario Parra.
Cuba:
The month of July has been characterized by arrests and an unleashing of
violence against independent journalists. Marilyn Lahera and José
Antonio Reinier of the Santiago Press agency were beaten up by police in
Santiago during a rally marking the drowning deaths of passengers abroad
the tugboat 13 de Marzo, sunk by the Cuban armed forces six years ago off
Havana. They were trying to flee the country.
On July 15, Interior Ministry agents took journalist Ricardo González
Alfonso to a residence on the outskirts of the city and interrogated him
for six hours in a bid to enlist him as a secret agent for the government
within the independent press. He later reported on the incident publicly.
On the positive side, journalist Víctor Rolando Arroyo was freed
after spending six months in the Km 5-1/2 Prison in the western Cuban province
of Pinar del Río. Three other journalists remain in prison, two of
them - Joel de Jesús Díaz and Manuel González Castellanos
- have been taken ill and are receiving no medical attention. Bernardo Arévalo
Padrón, who is serving a six-year term at Ariza Prison in the central
province of Cienfuegos, has been ordered to do hard labor at the prison
camp.
Ecuador:
Three bills have been submitted to Congress that threaten press freedom.
One is the Economic Transformation of Ecuador bill (known as Trole II),
which would prohibit anyone who runs or owns a company providing a public
service from owning a bank or news media outlet. Another is the Child and
Adolescent Code bill which seeks to require the media to publish news concerning
children and adolescents every day and to carry news in the Quechua language.
The third is the bill for a Professional Journalist Solidarity Fund Act
which would create a not-for-profit body to provide aid to journalists falling
on hard times. It would be funded by revenue from a 0.2% tax on paid advertising
in all news media.
United States:
The U.S. Supreme Court issued two important decisions in May:
First, it upheld a ruling Internet service providers are no legally or financially
responsible for any libel that may occur in e-mail or bulletin board messages.
Secondly, it declared as unconstitutional and a violation of the First Amendment
a Congressional bill seeking to require cable television operators to block
transmission of programs with explicit sexual content (indecent and obscene)
or that they be shown during restrict hours - between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00
a.m.
Guatemala:
News photographer Roberto Martínez Castañeda of the daily
La Prensa was killed on April 27 by a private security guard during protest
demonstrations against a city bus fare hike. Three reporters and television
cameramen were injured.
The director of the Centro de Reportes Informativos (Cerigua), Ileana Alamilla,
and her staff received repeated death threats.
Haiti:
The murder of journalist Jean Leopold Dominique, owner of Radio Haiti Inter,
on April 3 was another mortal blow to the press. Just before his death,
Dominique had leveled criticism at "political sectors that prevent
the advance of democracy" in Haiti. Since then, his wife, journalist
Michel Montas, the radios director, said she had received a number of death
threats.
On April 4, Radio Unidad was vandalized by heavily-armed masked intruders
who severely damaged electrical installations and recording studios and
made off with transmission equipment. the community radio station Vwa Peyizan
Sid, run by Catholic priest Yves Edmon, suffered a similar attack on May
3.
Mexico:
During the past three months four journalists were murdered, with no arrests
to date in any of the cases. On July 19, the publisher of the newspaper
La Verdad in Atizapán de Zaragoza, Hugo Sánchez Eustaquio,
was found dead three months after he was kidnapped. Several news photographers
were beaten up and threatened, among them TV Azteca reporter Lilly Téllez,
who was assaulted but escaped unhurt.
On June 17, William Uicab, a cameraman for Canal 8 cable television in Chetumal,
Quintana Roo state, was murdered.
On June 15, Freddy Secundino Sánchez, a stringer for Epoca magazine,
was kidnapped, tortured and threatened by assailants believed to be judicial
police officers.
On April 28, José Ramírez Puente a report and announcer for
Radio Net in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua state, was murdered and on
April 9, Pablo Pineda Gaucín, a reporter for the daily La Opinión
of Matamoros, Tamaulipas state, was killed.
Nicaragua:
The daily La Prensa received a demand for payment of almost a half million
dollars in taxes following an audit carried out by the Revenue Department,
seen as a reprisal for reports it had published on government corruption.
La Prensa and television station Canal 2 were subjected to a public smear
campaign waged by pro-government news media, in which it was urged to pay
its taxes. The government continues discriminating against critical media
in the placement of official advertising.
Panama:
A warrant for the arrest of the editor of the daily El Siglo, Carlos Singares,
was issued in late June by Attorney General José Antonio Sossa as
an apparent reprisal for a report Singares wrote in the paper on June 22
in which he said that the official had engaged in improper conduct.
The IAPA pointed out the contradiction between the attorney generals ordering
Singares to be held in custody for eight days and President Mireya Moscosos
repeal on December 20, 1999, of Law 11 of 1978 which had authorized the
jailing of journalists.
Paraguay:
The state of exception (state of emergency) declared following the aborted
coup detat restricted freedom of the press. A number of journalists were
arrested. Several radio stations critical of the governments were destroyed,
while others had their telephone lines cut and were threatened with being
shut down.
Even after the emergency measures were lifted, verbal threats against the
independent press continued and legal action against journalists intensified.
On April 14, Benito Ramón Jara Guzmán, correspondent of radio
station Iby Yaú in the city of Bernardino Caballero, north of Asunción,
was murdered.
Peru:
Several news media and individual journalists were subjected to systematic
pressure, threats and harassment by certain sectors of the government and
intelligence services. The financial, tax, advertising and labor difficulties
of newspapers, magazines and television stations have become tools for self-censorship
or alignment with the government.
The campaign of spurious legal action against El Comercio continued. This
has coincided with the papers allegations of mass falsification of signatures
of groups supporting the ruling alliance in the run-up to presidential elections.
Television station Canal N, an affiliate of Global Televisión Canal
13 of Huaraz, and El Comercio de Cusco were fined for broadcasting election
polls during a legal blackout period.
The printing equipment of two anti-government newspapers was ordered seized.
There were complaints that under pressure of the government several radio
news programs were forced to stop broadcasting and a newspaper in the township
of San Borja was shut down.
Puerto Rico:
Nine journalists were arrested while covering a protest by local people
against the use of the U.S. Marines base on Vieques Island for military
maneuvers.
Legal proceedings were begun for repeal of statutes making libel a criminal
offense.
Dominican Republic:
A special commission named by President Leonel Fernández completed
a study to amend and modernize the Press Law dating from 1962. A bill for
such amendment, based on the 10 principles of the Declaration of Chapultepec,
is to be sent to Congress by the president.
Uruguay:
Continuing protests by the IAPA and its first vice president, Danilo Arbilla,
editor of the Montevideo weekly Búsqueda, over discrimination in
the placement of official advertising has led to a smear campaign being
waged against him, in which he has been accused of drug money laundering,
by a number of leftwing and sensational media and by the police chief. After
the latter threatened Arbilla with legal action but failed to back up his
charges, he was fired and the case was shelved.
The Uruguayan Press Association reported that Búsquedas telephones
were being tapped.
On May 2, sports commentator Julio César Sánchez Padilla,
host of the program "Estado Uno" broadcast on state-run Channel
5 TV, was shot and injured in one of several attacks by unidentified assailants.
Venezuela:
The media, editors and reporters continue to come under verbal attacks and
receive threats from senior government officials.
On July 9, the publisher of La Razón, Pablo López Ulacio,
was ordered held under house arrest, but the judge who issued the warrant
was dismissed from the bench five days later. Graudi Villegas, the new judge
named to hear the libel case against López Ulacio, on July 18 upheld
a prior injunction prohibiting López Ulacio from publishing any reference
to the complainant in the case, Tobías Carrero, an executive of a
multinational insurance company, or anything related to the proceedings.
Impunity:
A total of 225 journalists have been murdered in the past 12 years, 15 since
the General Assembly in Houston last October - six in Colombia, four in
Mexico, two in Guatemala and one each in Haiti, Paraguay and Uruguay.
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