New York, January 4,
2010---The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on state and federal
authorities to step up their investigation into the abduction of a veteran police
reporter who was seized by masked men in Sinaloa state on Wednesday. The
reporter, José Luis Romero, remained missing today.
Romero, who worked for the private radio network Línea
Directa, had gone to a restaurant in downtown Los Mochis about 6 p.m., according to local
press accounts. Before he entered, reports said, several gunmen in ski masks
overpowered him and forced him into an SUV.
The chief of police investigators in the state, Jesús
Escalante Leyva, who was overseeing the inquiry into Romero’s abduction, was himself
killed about six hours later, Mexican press reports said. The state attorney
general told reporters that the two cases might be connected, according to
press reports. Escalante was shot about 30 times within about 150 feet of his
office, the reports said.
Línea Directa issued a statement saying that managers
believed Romero’s abduction was in reprisal for his work as a reporter. State authorities
are looking into the case but told CPJ that they had no leads yet.
“We are very worried about the fate of José Luis Romero,” said
Carlos Lauría, CPJ senior program coordinator for the Americas. “We call
on state and federal authorities to do all in their power to locate Romero and
bring him to safety.”
Romero is the second Mexican journalist to disappear in the
last two months. María
Esther Aguilar Cansimbe was abducted in Zamora, Michoacán state, in November. Romero is
the ninth Mexican reporter to have gone missing since 2005, according to CPJ
research. “The alarming record of disappearances is affecting reporters’
ability to cover the news and represents another blow to Mexican democracy,”
Lauría added.
Mexico
is one of the most dangerous places for the press. CPJ research shows that 41
journalists have been killed in Mexico, at least 18 in direct
reprisal for their work, since 1992. Covering crime news is especially risky.
In many areas, drug cartels routinely threaten journalists unless news coverage
is tailored to their liking. In areas where there is war between cartels,
journalists are caught between the conflicting demands of opposing traffickers.
Romero was considered well-versed on the dug trade but very
cautious about what he said on the air, colleagues told CPJ. They told CPJ that
Romero had covered the crime beat for about 20 years for several news
organizations. Several journalists in Los
Mochis told CPJ that they are afraid to conduct
in-depth reporting on anything concerning the drug cartels.