A virgin statue remained unscathed next to a window shattered by gunfire in Mexico. |
With the Mexican state offering journalists
little protection, the resultant drop in freedom of information has contributed
to a heightened sense of insecurity in the country.
Claire San Filippo, head of Reporters Without Borders’ Americas desk, said that journalists in Mexico are
self-censoring due to threats and violence, but also because violence against
journalists is rarely punished by the state.
“It is of tremendous concern for information
freedom because people are saying ‘we are not going to cover certain areas’,
fearing revenge and not trusting that the state is going to be able to protect
them.”
San Filippo says that the state bears the main
duty under international law to protect journalists.
“The state obviously has a responsibility to
protect the journalist, and to make sure that they can guarantee their
security,” she said.
“There is a mechanism to actually protect
human rights defenders and journalists and unfortunately, the mechanism hasn’t
been working in a very efficient manner and hasn’t really helped the situation
overall.”
The first two months of 2015 have already seen
marked violence and intimidation towards journalists, including kidnappings and
threats.
Reporting for Journalism in the Americas Mariana Muñoz wrote
that, “an increase in organized crime-related violence has terrorized the
Mexican border state of Tamaulipas. Conflicts between rival cartel factions in
the neighboring border cities of Reynosa and Matamoros have left dozens dead,
escalating the present danger for journalists practicing in the region.”
The newspaper El Mañana reported on a gunfight that killed nine
people. Although they did not name any cartel individuals involved, their
editor, Juárez Torres, was kidnapped and warned “We are going to
kill you.”
Torres later “fled the country, half of the
staff did not return to work the following day, and at least four
journalists at the publication immediately announced their resignation,” Muñoz reported.
El Mañana has since avoided reporting on violent
crime in Tamaulipas.
Speaking about Torres’ kidnapping and other similar incidents, San Filippo said that “when you look at the beginning of this year, it’s obviously dramatic and extremely preoccupying because we have journalists who say ‘we are not going to cover the issues of insecurity, violence and its consequences on people, or we’re actually going to leave the country to go to the United States because we feel so unsecure.”
She says that Reporters Without Borders calls
on the Mexican government to take the threats against journalists seriously and
“not try to either diminish them or try to discredit the journalists by saying
that they are actually not journalists and saying they are not related.”
San Filippo said the state should also provide
timely and effective protection to journalists and their families when the
journalists request it and importantly, must hold perpetrators of violence
against journalists accountable.
San Filippo said this was important so that
“journalists can feel secure and feel that they can carry out their job without
risking their lives or lives and physical integrity of their loved ones.”
“This is the only way that you can make sure
that you can ensure that there is no self-censorship and journalists don’t feel
that they have to go to another country to feel safe.”
Home of organized crime
According to In Sight Crime, a foundation that studies organized crime in the Americas, “Mexico
is home to the (Western) hemisphere’s largest, most sophisticated and violent
organized criminal gangs.”
“They traffic in illegal drugs, contraband,
arms and humans, and launder their proceeds through regional moneychangers,
banks and local economic projects. They have penetrated the police and
border patrols on nearly every level, in some cases starting with recruits for
these units. They play political and social roles in some areas, operating as
the de facto security forces.”
Steve Killelea, executive chair of the Institute for Economics
and Peace, wrote last year that since “the start of the calamitous
drug war in 2007” Mexico has dropped 45 places on the International Peace Index – down to 133 of 162 countries on the
most recent (2013) index.
Killelea says that although Mexico does well
in terms of development indicators such as life expectancy and youth
empowerment, its poor overall rating in peace is partly due to the consequences
of violence against journalists and poor freedom of information
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