The owner of Rádio Nova Coari suspects the attack was motivated by the station's reports on Mayor Arnaldo Mituoso's administration.
(ABRAJI/IFEX) – Rádio Nova Coari in the Brazilian state of Amazonas was set on fire on 8 February 2010. The police have no definitive theory explaining the incident, but they have not dismissed the possibility of a politically motivated assault linked to supporters of Coari’s mayor, Arnaldo Mituoso.
According to João Moraes, from Coari’s police force, two armed men wearing motorcycle helmets with dark visors arrived at the scene around 9:00 a.m. They subdued the radio station’s employees and then burned down the station’s only studio. The fire spread throughout the whole building. Nevertheless, no one was harmed. Before leaving the site, one of the criminals is reported to have said, “let’s go, we did our job.”
It is the third attack on the radio station, according to its owner and director-president, Aguinaldo Medes. The station had already survived two other fires in August and September 2009.
Mendes suspects the attack was motivated by the radio station’s reports on Arnaldo Mituoso’s administration. “I cannot accuse anyone, but every time a subject regarding the administration is mentioned, someone tried to set [the radio station on] fire,” he said. The station’s owner also mentioned three lawsuits the mayor has filed against the station.
Recently, the station had covered a delay in paying the town’s employees and announced the debut of a new show that would approach politics “more vehemently,” explained the director-president.
In an interview with the newspaper “A Crítica,” the representative of the mayor’s office in Manaus, Wilson Cavalcanti, denied any involvement of the mayor in the incident. Antônio Maduro, the officer in charge of Coari’s police force, affirms that there is no concrete evidence that the assault has any connection with the mayor and that the investigation continues.