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ARGENTINA
WHILE ARGENTINA FELL DEEPER INTO ECONOMIC CRISIS DURING 2001, and
President Fernando de la Rúa resigned in disgrace as a result,
the media worked largely unhindered. But the worsening economy hurt advertising
and sales, and the Supreme Court dealt damaging blows to press freedom.
2001 was Argentina's fourth year of recession, and the country saw widespread
street protests and strikes against austerity measures aimed at erasing
the country's budget deficit. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) provided
a US$8 billion bailout in August, but by year's end, the fund withheld
a US$1.26 billion loan installment. At press time, Argentina had defaulted
on its foreign debts and had devalued its peso.
On May 1, Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo imposed a 21 percent value-added
tax (VAT) on all media sales, according to Gabriel Matijas, manager of
the publishers' association Asociación de Entidades Periodísticas
Argentinas. Matijas told CPJ that before May 1, print media were only
required to pay VAT on advertising revenues. Since the new tax would have
bankrupted many media outletsespecially smaller ones in the provincesthe
government halved the tax and allowed publishers to reduce their social
security payments in an equal amount to what they paid in VAT taxes.
Few attacks on press freedom occurred in 2001, a fact attributable to
Argentina's vibrant and combative media, which publicized attempted restrictions
with gusto. Yet the press was powerless against the Supreme Court, which
is stocked with supporters of former president Carlos Saúl Menem.
On November 20, the Supreme Court threw out charges against Menem, who
had been under house arrest since June on accusations of illegal arms
trafficking with Ecuador and Croatiaa scandal that was uncovered
by the media. In its widely criticized ruling, the court took the opportunity
to warn other judges against the pressure of public opinion, "whether
spontaneously formed or oriented by the media."
The Supreme Court handed Menem another victory on September 25 in a case
against the newsmagazine NOTICIAS. The court ruled that the weekly
had violated Menem's right to privacy by reporting on his extramarital
relationship with a former schoolteacher. Besides requiring the newsmagazine
to pay Menem 60,000 pesos (US$60,000), the Supreme Court ordered NOTICIAS
to publish the judgment.
On November 15, Horacio Verbitsky and Eduardo Bertoni, secretary-general
and legal adviser, respectively, of the Argentine press freedom organization
PERIODISTAS, presented the NOTICIAS case to the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights (IACHR) in Washington, D.C. Accompanied by CPJ board member
and Chicago Tribune columnist Clarence Page and World Press Freedom Committee
executive director Marilyn Greene, Verbitsky and Bertoni presented a 68-page
complaint to IACHR executive secretary Santiago A. Canton on behalf of
PERIODISTAS and NOTICIAS asking the IACHR to suspend the verdict while
the commission examines the case. At year's end, the commission was studying
the case.
Verbitsky was in the United States to receive one of CPJ's 2001 International
Press Freedom Awards for his pathbreaking reporting and his efforts to
fight for a better legal framework for press freedom.
A bill designed to rid Argentine law of criminal defamation statutes was
signed by then-president Adolfo Rodríguez Saá on December
27 and is currently awaiting congressional approval. After the IACHR negotiated
a friendly settlement in 1999 between PERIODISTAS and the Argentine government
relating to several criminal defamation cases, PERIODISTAS developed the
legislation, which introduces and codifies the "actual malice" and neutral
reporting standards.
Under the "actual malice" standards, first articulated by the U.S. Supreme
Court in the 1964 case New York Times Co. vs. Sullivan, plaintiffs
must prove not only that the published information is false, but also
that journalists knew or should have known it was false at the time of
publication. The neutral reporting standard, already accepted by the Argentine
Supreme Court in a 1986 case, holds that plaintiffs may not sue journalists
for accurately reproducing information from an explicitly mentioned source.
While the new law only outlaws criminal defamation in the case of public
figures, it provides significant additional protections for Argentine
journalists.
On August 23, 2001, the Supreme Court confirmed its 1986 decision on neutral
reporting standards. The ruling upheld a lower court decision rejecting
former army major Arnaldo Luis Bruno's lawsuit against the daily La
Nación over an article that linked him to the 1992 bombing
of the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires.
In the investigation into the 1999 murder of Ricardo Gangeme, publisher
and editor of the weekly magazine El Informador Chubutense, three
jailed suspects were released on September 21 because they had spent two
years in prison without being brought to trial, according to Juan Carlos
Rojas, deputy editor of La Jornada, a daily that Gangeme edited
until 1998. No trial date had been set at year's end, Rojas said.
January 18
Análisis
ATTACKED
Unidentified individuals ransacked the offices of the weekly Análisis,
based in the town of Paraná in Entre Ríos Province, north
of Buenos Aires on the Uruguayan border.
The attack likely took place in the early morning hours, when the office
was closed. The doors to the weekly's offices were not forced open, leading
staffers to believe that the perpetrators had a key. The entire office
was ransacked and drawer locks were tampered with, suggesting that the
premises had been thoroughly searched.
The attackers took documents, audio recordings of interviews, a videotape,
and two cellular phones. They also searched the desk of editor Daniel
Enz, taking documents but leaving valuable items such as signed checks.
Because they did not steal any expensive office equipment, robbery was
not a likely motive.
In the January 25 issue of Análisis, Enz wrote that days
before the break-in, individuals who appeared to be plainclothes intelligence
agents kept the weekly's offices under surveillance.
Enz claimed the attack was intended to intimidate the paper's staff.
He speculated that local officials ordered the attack in response to Análisis'
critical coverage of the provincial government.
Later on January 18, local police visited the Análisis
offices to gather evidence and dust for fingerprints. Examining magistrate
Raúl Herzovich was subsequently placed in charge of the investigation.
At press time, the inquiry into the assault was stalled, and Enz had
not been called to testify.
March 28
Marcelo Bonelli, Clarín
LEGAL ACTION
Julio Blanck, Clarín
LEGAL ACTION
Bonelli, a journalist with the national daily Clarín,
and Blanck, Clarín's national political editor, were charged
with breaching tax confidentiality after an article by Bonelli in the
June 5, 2000, edition of Clarín reported that Víctor
Alderete, the former head of the Comprehensive Medical Attention Program,
the national health service for retirees, was being investigated by the
General Direction of Taxes (DGI) for tax evasion.
Bonelli reported that the DGI suspected Alderete, who claimed to have
a negative income, of hiding income behind loans he obtained from a dummy
corporation in order to purchase a farm for 4.5 million pesos (US$4.5
million). Bonelli also wrote that Alderete was suspected of bribery and
channeling money from bribes to the dummy corporation.
In his article, Bonelli cited Alderete's 1997 and 1998 tax returns,
the latest available.
On March 28, 2001, federal judge Claudio Bonadio did not deny the truthfulness
of the article but ordered the prosecution of Bonelli under Law 11.683,
which guarantees the confidentiality of tax information. In the same ruling,
the judge dismissed the charges against Blanck, contending that he had
fulfilled his responsibility to ensure that the information published
was correct.
The charge against Bonelli carries a prison sentence of one month to
two years, according to the local press freedom organization PERIODISTAS.
On July 17, the Federal Appeals Court overturned Judge Bonadio's decision
and ruled that press freedom should prevail over individual privacy, especially
when the news is of public interest or involves a public official. The
judges further ruled that Law 11.683 did not apply to journalists.
On July 7, 2000, Alderete was prosecuted for tax evasion and held in
preventive detention. He was released on September 18 of this year, but
the investigation into his finances continued at press time.
September 25
NOTICIAS
LEGAL ACTION
Jorge Fontevecchia, NOTICIAS
LEGAL ACTION
Héctor D'Amico, NOTICIAS
LEGAL ACTION
The Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling against the weekly newsmagazine
NOTICIAS, its director Fontevecchia, and its former editor D'Amico.
According to the judgment, NOTICIAS violated former president
Carlos Saúl Menem's right to privacy by reporting on his extramarital
relationship with Martha Meza, a former schoolteacher who is currently
a parliamentary deputy.
In 1996, Menem sued NOTICIAS for invasion of privacy over a series
of 1995 articles about his relationship with Meza.
NOTICIAS reported that the relationship began in the early 1980s
during Argentina's military dictatorship (the future president was detained
in Formosa Province at the time), and that Menem was the father of Meza's
illegitimate son, who was born in 1981. The weekly also reported that
Menem gave various expensive gifts to Meza.
Meza, who by 1995 had become a provincial congressional deputy for Menem's
Justicialist Party (PJ), currently serves as a PJ deputy in the federal
parliament.
Menem lost the case, but an appeals court overturned the ruling in 1998.
On September 25, five of nine Supreme Court justices voted to uphold the
1998 verdict against NOTICIAS, with four abstentions.
The Supreme Court's September 25 ruling also upheld an appellate court
order requiring NOTICIAS to publish the judgment. However, the
Supreme Court lowered Menem's damages award from 150,000 pesos (US$150,000)
to 60,000 pesos (US$60,000).
Neither Menem nor the judges have ever questioned the accuracy of the
magazine's reporting.
On November 15, Horacio Verbitsky and Eduardo Bertoni, secretary-general
and legal adviser, respectively, of the Argentine press freedom organization
PERIODISTAS, filed a petition on the NOTICIAS case with the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) in Washington, D.C.
Accompanied by CPJ board member and Chicago Tribune columnist
Clarence Page and World Press Freedom Committee executive director Marilyn
Greene, Verbitsky and Bertoni presented a 68-page complaint to IACHR executive
secretary Santiago A. Canton on behalf of PERIODISTAS and NOTICIAS.
The complaint asked the IACHR to suspend the verdict while it examines
the case, as well as to urge the Argentine government to amend its legal
system in order to guarantee freedom of expression.
CPJ published an alert about the case that same day. At year's end,
the IACHR was still reviewing the complaint.
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