BajaNomad
Not logged in [Login - Register]

Go To Bottom
Printable Version  
Author: Subject: Gangs Use the Press
CaboRon
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 3401
Registered: 3-24-2007
Location: The Valley of the Moon
Member Is Offline

Mood: Peacefull

[*] posted on 7-31-2010 at 06:56 AM
Gangs Use the Press


Thursday, July 29, 2010 at 3:35 p.m.

MEXICO CITY — Gunmen who abducted four journalists in northern Mexico are demanding their media outlets broadcast videos apparently taped by a drug cartel that accuse officials of favoring a rival gang.

Drug gangs often kill, threaten or beat journalists to intimidate them and stop them from covering drug related stories but kidnapping them to force newspapers and television stations to publish their messages is a never before seen tactic.

The Inter-American Press Association expressed outrage Thursday at the kidnapping and urged the Mexican government to help free them.

"We are seeing, with grave concern, that the violence keeps expanding in the country while reporters remain without the proper tools to do their job without fear of reprisal," the press association's president, Alejandro Aguirre, said.

The journalists - two of them from Televisa, Mexico's biggest television network - were snatched after they left a prison in the city of Gomez Palacio where they had covered a protest against the arrest of the penitentiary's director, one of their employers said.

The abducted journalists include a reporter and a cameraman from Televisa, a cameraman for Milenio Multimedia television and a reporter for Durango state newspaper El Vespertino.

Neither Milenio nor Televisa returned calls seeking comment Thursday. But a story published Wednesday in Milenio newspaper, part of the Milenio Multimedia group, said that shortly after the reporters went missing on Monday their cameraman, Jaime Canales, called to say his captors wanted the channel to air three videos that had earlier appeared on a blog devoted to drug trafficking.

Canales told his editors that his captors said "they were unhappy with the coverage" of the prison scandal.

On Tuesday, Milenio Multimedia aired the three videos, which last about 15 minutes and show two local police officers and two civilians being interrogated and confessing to working for the Zetas drug gang in the Laguna region, which includes the cities of Gomez Palacio and Lerdo in Durango state and Torreon in neighboring Coahuila.

The area has seen an increase in drug violence that authorities attribute to a turf battle between the Sinaloa drug cartel and the Zetas.

The newspaper said the journalists' captors are members of a drug cartel that "is unhappy with the coverage given to the prison" scandal but the report doesn't identify it.

On Sunday, federal authorities arrested the Gomez Palacio state prison director, Margarita Rojas, and three other prison officials because they allegedly let inmates out, lent them guns and sent them off in official vehicles to carry out mass killings, including the massacre of 17 people last week.

Prosecutors said the prison-based hit squad is suspected in three mass shootings, including the July 18 attack on a party in the city of Torreon. In that incident, gunmen fired indiscriminately into a crowd of mainly young people in a rented hall, killing 17 people.

Federal prosecutors said tests on bullet casings found at the scenes matched those of four assault rifles assigned to prison guards.

News of the kidnapping had been kept quiet until Tuesday when Mexico's National Human Rights Commission called on the government to find the journalists following a radio interview with Durango state interior secretary Oliverio Reza. Reza told Formato 21 Radio on Tuesday that the two cars the reporters had been riding in had been found set ablaze near the prison.

In an opinion article published Wednesday, Milenio's Deputy Managing Editor Ciro Gomez Leyva called Reza and the human rights commission "irresponsible."

The reporters remained missing Thursday.

Press freedom groups say Mexico is one of the world's deadliest countries for journalists. More than 60 journalists have been killed in Mexico since 2000, according to the National Human Rights Commission. Many more Mexican reporters have received threats from drug gangs.




View user's profile
Udo
Elite Nomad
******


Avatar


Posts: 6346
Registered: 4-26-2008
Location: Black Hills, SD/Ensenada/San Felipe
Member Is Offline

Mood: TEQUILA!

[*] posted on 7-31-2010 at 06:19 PM


Brings a new meaning to "Freedom of the Press".:biggrin:



Udo

Youth is wasted on the young!

View user's profile
BillP
Nomad
**




Posts: 420
Registered: 1-28-2010
Location: Lake Havasu City, AZ
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 7-31-2010 at 06:53 PM


Good news, all four have been released!

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2010/07/31/20100731-M...
View user's profile

  Go To Top

 






All Content Copyright 1997- Q87 International; All Rights Reserved.
Powered by XMB; XMB Forum Software © 2001-2014 The XMB Group






"If it were lush and rich, one could understand the pull, but it is fierce and hostile and sullen. The stone mountains pile up to the sky and there is little fresh water. But we know we must go back if we live, and we don't know why." - Steinbeck, Log from the Sea of Cortez

 

"People don't care how much you know, until they know how much you care." - Theodore Roosevelt

 

"You can easily judge the character of others by how they treat those who they think can do nothing for them or to them." - Malcolm Forbes

 

"Let others lead small lives, but not you. Let others argue over small things, but not you. Let others cry over small hurts, but not you. Let others leave their future in someone else's hands, but not you." - Jim Rohn

 

"The best way to get the right answer on the internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer." - Cunningham's Law







Thank you to Baja Bound Mexico Insurance Services for your long-term support of the BajaNomad.com Forums site.







Emergency Baja Contacts Include:

Desert Hawks; El Rosario-based ambulance transport; Emergency #: (616) 103-0262