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DOMINICAN
REPUBLIC
DOMINICAN PRESIDENT HIPÓLITO MEJÍA has received mixed reviews
for his policy toward the press since he took office in August 2000. Although
Dominican journalists are generally free to express their views, and the
government does not officially restrict the press, journalists have complained
of government attempts to influence coverage.
President Mejía, with his blunt and sometimes confrontational style,
has used insulting language when referring to journalists and editors
who criticize his administration. In late June, the Santo Domingo daily
El Caribe reported that Mejía's government had diverted
funds from public works programs to buy buses for a public transportation
plan. Mejía said of the story, "That is a lie. That's only in the
mind of Bernardo Vega [El Caribe's editor], one of those idiots
who writes things that are not true," according to the daily Listín
Diario.
In an August 17 interview with the Santo Domingo daily Última
Hora, José Tejada Gómez, then-president of the journalists'
association Colegio Dominicano de Periodistas (CDP), noted that Mejía's
insults were common, and that his first year in office was marked by "constant
conflicts" with journalists.
According to the CDP, signs of government intolerance toward the press
abound. In late June, Darío Medrano and Ramón Carmona, reporter
and cameraman, respectively, for U.S.-based Univisión TV network
and the Santo Domingo TV channel Color Visión-Canal 9, were threatened,
allegedly by government officials, for their coverage of nationwide street
protests against a government-imposed economic adjustment package.
Gen. Luis Rodríguez Florimón, of the National Police, meanwhile,
warned in early August that he would monitor radio and TV programs and
threatened to jail anybody who criticized or offended the president. The
general did not carry out his threats, but his words were typical of the
government's hard-line reactions to criticism.
Dominican journalists have also complained about low salaries and job
instability, which makes them vulnerable to bribery and other economic
pressures.
Investigations into the May 1994 disappearance of columnist and academic
Narciso González remained stalled at year's end. González,
a harsh critic of the Dominican government and military, "disappeared"allegedly
at the hands of the militaryafter he publicly criticized the tainted
elections that brought former president Joaquín Balaguer to power.
Although former members of the military and the police have been interrogated,
no one has been charged in the case, which the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights took under review in 1998.
The bill to amend the 1962 Law of Expression and Dissemination of Thought,
also known as Law 6132, was passed by the Senate on July 18 after being
submitted by President Mejía in September 2000. Drafted by local
press organizations, newspaper executives, and media law specialists,
the legislation widens access to information and provides for civil penalties
in cases of defamation. The Chamber of Deputies' Justice Committee was
considering the bill at press time.
June 28
Darío Medrano, Univisión, Color Visión-Canal 9
THREATENED
Ramón Carmona, Univisión
THREATENED
Medrano and Carmona, reporter and cameraman, respectively, for the U.S.-based
Univisión television network, were threatened after they reported
on street protests against a government-imposed economic adjustment package,
which included higher taxes on gas and food and higher electricity rates,
according to local press reports.
The journalists told the Santo Domingo daily El Nacional that
they had received phone threats from people who identified themselves
as government officials. The callers said they believed the reports damaged
the Dominican Republic's image abroad. According to statements Carmona
made to El Nacional, an unidentified caller told him that
he had been blacklisted.
In addition to being Univisión's correspondent in the Dominican
Republic, Medrano is a reporter for the Santo Domingo TV station Color
Visión-Canal 9.
On June 30, the Santo Domingo daily Última Hora reported that
the journalists' association Colegio Dominicano de Periodistas had issued
a communiqué expressing its concern about the threats against Medrano
and Carmona and requesting that they be investigated.
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