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WHILE REPORTERS IN BRAZIL'S MAJOR CITIES UNEARTHED
various political scandals, their colleagues in the provinces faced violent
reprisal from politicians and local landowners because of their reporting.
One provincial journalist was murdered.
In July, the aggressive urban press reignited a lingering scandal involving
a 169 million real (US$90 million) embezzlement scheme tied to the construction
of a courthouse in São Paulo. While the scandal had previously been the
subject of a congressional investigation, new revelations involved the government
for the first time. The weekly ISTOÉ reported that a then-fugitive,
now-imprisoned judge implicated in the scheme had 117 telephone conversations
with President Fernando Henrique Cardoso's former chief adviser (there is
no evidence that Cardoso was directly involved in the scheme, according
to a credible local source). Investigations continued at year's end.
On November 12, the daily Folha de S. Paulo added to Cardoso's already
considerable worries when it reported that over 10 million reales (US$5
million) in contributions to Cardoso's 1998 re-election campaign had gone
unreported. Around the same time, the weekly magazine Veja revealed
that the Brazilian Intelligence Agency (ABIN) was investigating matters
outside its mandate, including the activities of Itamar Franco, a former
president who is now an opposition governor. ABIN's director was subsequently
dismissed.
While reporters in Brazil's major cities received accolades for breakings
these major stories, provincial journalists who carried out similar efforts
were threatened, attacked, and even murdered. Zezinho Cazuza of Rádio
Xingó FM in Canindé de São Francisco, a small town in the
northeastern state of Sergipe, was shot to death on March 13 after he repeatedly
accused the local mayor of corruption. According to ISTOÉ,
Mayor Genivaldo Galindo da Silva had publicly threatened to kill Cazuza,
and police arrested a suspect who claimed the mayor had paid him to carry
out the murder.
On March 8, a Veja reporter was kidnapped and threatened at gunpoint
while investigating illegal land sales in the northern state of Pará.
The kidnapper told the reporter he would be killed if he published his story,
according to the Associação Nacional de Jornais (ANJ), an association
of newspaper publishers. In April, unknown individuals ransacked the home
and threatened the life of a TV reporter in the same state after he testified
in court about the involvement of local officials in the drug trade, according
to the Federação Nacional dos Jornalistas, a national press union
that monitors press freedom abuses.
In October, a local judge in Acre State banned local press coverage of municipal
elections, on the grounds that such reporting could constitute political
propaganda. The Acre press reacted by publishing cake recipes or leaving
blank space on newspaper pages, according to Sérgio Buarque de Gusmão,
journalist and director of the watchdog group Instituto Gutenberg. (These
tactics were used to denounce censorship during the 1970s, when Brazil was
ruled by the military.)
Efforts to reform the 1967 Press Law remained stalled in the Chamber of
Deputies. Although most Brazilian journalists support the reform process,
they oppose a proposed amendment that would impose enormous fines for defamation
and make media owners liable for unlimited damages. If the provision becomes
law, small media outlets could be bankrupted by a single defamation case.
At year's end, the Senate was still considering legislation that would prohibit
public officials from leaking information to the press that could damage
the reputation, honor, or privacy of any person currently under investigation.
Indiscreet officials would face dismissal, hefty fines, up to two years'
imprisonment, and a ban on holding another public job for three years.
The influential daily O Estado de S. Paulo described this measure
as "a price worth paying," but other journalists condemned it as tantamount
to a gag law. A similar initiative that would have barred prosecutors and
judges from providing information about court cases was defeated in the
Chamber of Deputies after a public outcry, according to the ANJ.
FEBRUARY 22
Érick Guimarães, O Povo
ATTACKED
Marcos Studart, O Povo
ATTACKED
A local politician attacked Guimarães and Studart, reporter and photographer,
respectively, with the magazine O Povo in the city of Fortaleza,
along with their driver, Valdir Gomes Soares. The O Povo
team was in the town of Hidrolandia reporting on alleged irregularities
in the administration of Mayor Luís Antônio Farias, according
to local sources. The mayor had been accused of corruption and physical
attacks against political opponents.
When Farias found the two journalists at his office he started beating
up their driver. Studart tried to stop the attack, but the mayor turned
on him as well, while Guimarães went to find help.
The mayor beat and kicked Studart and Soares, insisting they reveal who
had sent them to investigate his administration. Both journalists found
sanctuary in a nearby house, along with the driver.
MARCH 13
Zezinho Cazuza, Rádio Xingó FM
KILLED
Cazuza, also known as José Wellington Fernandes, a journalist with
Rádio Xingó FM in Canindé de São Francisco, a municipality
in the north-eastern state of Sergipe, was shot dead after leaving a party.
Two days later, police arrested José Ferreira Melo, also known
as Zé de Adolfo, who confessed to having killed Cazuza. Melo told
police that the mayor of Canindé, Genivaldo Galindo da Silva, had
offered him 3000 reales (US$1500) to kill Cazuza, and that he bought the
murder weapon with the 500 reales that the mayor paid him as an advance.
Cazuza had been a persistent critic of the mayor, denouncing his alleged
corruption and malfeasance on a daily basis. According to the Brazilian
magazine ISTOÉ, Galindo had threatened publicly to kill
the journalist.
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