(RSF/IFEX) – More than 15 journalists have faced violence, threats or judicial harassment over the past two weeks. On 22 May 2004, three unidentified persons kidnapped Leodegario Aguilar Lucas, director of “Mundo Político” magazine, from his home in Acapulco, Guerrero state, southwestern Mexico. The journalist’s family asked police not to intervene so as to allow […]
(RSF/IFEX) – More than 15 journalists have faced violence, threats or judicial harassment over the past two weeks.
On 22 May 2004, three unidentified persons kidnapped Leodegario Aguilar Lucas, director of “Mundo Político” magazine, from his home in Acapulco, Guerrero state, southwestern Mexico. The journalist’s family asked police not to intervene so as to allow them to negotiate his release. Some of Aguilar Lucas’s colleagues believe his kidnapping may be linked to his articles about alleged corruption involving local authorities. Aguilar Lucas is also the owner of a small hotel.
In Veracruz state, southeastern Mexico, Martin Serrano Herrera, founder and director of “Tribuna” newspaper, published in Jalapa, said he was assaulted in the street by three unidentified persons on 22 May. The journalist claimed his attackers were police officers. He believes the attack was linked to articles published in his newspaper that implicated several Veracruz public servants in corruption scandals.
On 23 May, Maximiliano Cortéz Zepeda, from Radio Variedades, and Mario Solis Espinoza and Edgar Badillo Medina, of the daily “Diario de Colima”, were assaulted by a group of about 20 youths led by Samuel Rodríguez Moreno, a nephew of former Colima state governor Fernando Moreno Peña. The three journalists were chased in the streets of the state capital, Colima, and viciously beaten just as they were arriving at Cortéz Zepeda’s home. Members of Cortéz Zepeda’s family were also beaten. The attackers made reference to the three journalists’ news reports criticising the alcohol and drug problems of Rodríguez Moreno and his friends.
On 27 May, at least nine journalists in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua state, northern Mexico, were contacted by an official from the Public Prosecutor’s Office, who demanded they disclose the source of news reports they published about several women’s murder cases. According to the daily “La Jornada”, the Public Prosecutor’s Office official told the journalists that the publication of the news reports had undermined the murder investigations. The journalists refused to reveal their sources.
The journalists contacted included Daniel Dominguez, from Radio Cañon 800; Jacinto Segura, of the daily “El Mexicano”; Gabriel Jasso, of Canal 56 television, an affiliate of the Televisa Group; Armando Rodríguez, of the daily “El Diario”; Raúl Pérez, of Televisión Azteca; Victor Armando Rey, of the local station Canal 5; Edgar Román, of Canal 44; and Carlos Huerta and Salvador Castro, of the daily “El Norte de Juárez”.
Finally, in a message received by RSF on 29 May, Francisco Guerrero Garro, director of the daily “El Clarín/Sur”, published in Cuernavaca, Morelos state, south of Mexico City, reported that his newspaper has been facing steady pressure since March. At the time, “El Clarín/Sur” published reports about two Cautla police officers’ alleged involvement in a rape. The paper also implicated municipal council members in a corruption case. Guerrero Garro said Cautla Mayor Arturo Cruz has been steadily harassing the paper and its local correspondent, Margarita Ruiz. “El Clarín/Sur” has complained of the harassment before the Morelos State Human Rights Commission.