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GUATEMALA
AMID HARASSMENT AND VIOLENCE AGAINST JOURNALISTS, human rights activists,
and judges involved in high-profile cases, Guatemala's political stability
deteriorated considerably in 2001, and press freedom along with it. The
administration of President Alfonso Portillo Cabrera, a member of the
right-wing Guatemalan Republican Front (FRG), showed little tolerance
for criticism of any kind.
Several attacks set the tone for the year. On February 20, a group of
protesters gathered in front of the offices of the Guatemala City daily
elPeriódico and threatened the newspaper's staff. The protesters
identified themselves as supporters of Luis Rabbé, then minister
of communications, infrastructure, and housing. The threats apparently
resulted from the newspaper's coverage of high-level government corruption,
including elPeriódico's strong criticism of Rabbé's
official conduct. Rabbé later resigned.
In late March, four elPeriódico journalists were threatened
and attacked after they uncovered mismanagement at a state-controlled
bank. In another controversial story known as "Guategate," Prensa Libre
revealed in 2000 that more than 20 FRG legislators had conspired to reduce
a new tax on alcoholic beverages. Former military dictator and current
president of Congress Gen. Efraín Ríos Montt was implicated
in the scandal and stripped of immunity from prosecution in March 2001.
In April, Ríos Montt complained that media coverage of "Guategate"
was part of an orchestrated campaign to damage his prestige and ensure
his "political lynching." In October 2001, the investigation of Ríos
Montt and the other legislators was shelved after a highly controversial
court ruling.
Early in the year, media tycoon Angel González, a Mexican national
and brother-in-law of former minister Rabbé, used his broadcasting
empire to wage a campaign to discredit elPeriódico and Prensa
Libre. Through front companies, González owns all four of Guatemala's
private television stations, which violates constitutional prohibitions
against both monopolies and foreign ownership of the media. He has canceled
two independent news programs and wields enormous influence over Guatemalan
politics.
González has been a leading financial contributor to President
Portillo's political campaigns, and Rabbé is a former executive
in González's media empire. González has also been linked
to shady business deals in Perú, where he allegedly attempted to
gain control of TV channel Canal 13 in collusion with disgraced Peruvian
intelligence adviser Vladimiro Montesinos, according to Peruvian sources.
Though President Portillo says he is concerned about González's
TV monopoly, he has done little to dismantle it. While the president has
pledged to open the remaining two broadcast TV channels to competitive
biddingthey are state-owned and currently don't broadcast any programmingno
concrete action has been taken.
On November 30, Guatemalan Journalists' Day, the single-chamber, FRG-controlled
Congress passed a bill that requires all university graduates, including
those with journalism degrees, to register with trade associations known
as colegios. The bill was then sent to President Portillo, who was asked
to veto it by the journalists' organization Asociación de Periodistas
de Guatemala (APG) and other international press freedom organizations.
Portillo promised a veto if he found that the bill was likely to damage
the interests of journalists.
The Guatemalan press has recently made more of an effort to defend itself
from government interference and harassment. In addition to APG activism,
the press freedom organization Centro para la Defensa de la Libertad de
Expresión organized its first seminar in June 2001.
Beyond Guatemala City, provincial journalists face harassment, threats,
intimidation, and violence. On September 5, radio journalist Jorge Mynor
Alegría Armendáriz was murdered outside his home in Puerto
Barrios, a port city located on the Caribbean coast in Izabal Department.
The journalist hosted an afternoon call-in show that often discussed corruption
and official misconduct. Following Alegría's death, his colleague
Enrique Aceituno resigned as host of a local news program, saying he had
received threats for criticizing local authorities.
One journalist's murder was resolved in 2001. On February 19, a court
sentenced former security guard Gustavo García to 15 years in prison
for killing Prensa Libre photographer Roberto Martínez and two
bystanders in April 2000, during a riot sparked by a bus-fare increase.
García's security firm was ordered to pay Martínez's family
150,000 quetzales (US$20,000) in damages. The second defendant, also a
security guard with the company, was acquitted.
February 20
elPeriódico
ATTACKED
About 50 protesters gathered in front of the elPeriódico
offices and threatened the newspaper's staff. According to CPJ sources,
the protesters identified themselves as supporters of Luis Rabbé,
then-minister of communications, infrastructure, and housing. Both elPeriódico
and the daily Prensa Libre had strongly criticized Rabbé's
official conduct.
Journalists at elPeriódico subsequently identified some
of the protesters as employees of the Ministry of Communications, Infrastructure,
and Housing. At least one car used to transport them was also traced to
the ministry.
The mob attempted to force open doors and threw burning copies of the
newspaper into the building, which also houses the Prensa Libre Group's
daily Nuestro Diario.
The protesters also tried to attack three photographers, two from elPeriódico
and one from Nuestro Diario, and damaged two vehicles belonging
to Nuestro Diario. Local police took 40 minutes to respond to a
call for help from elPeriódico's offices. When the police
finally arrived, they did not make any arrests.
In various articles published since November 2000, elPeriódico
exposed irregularities in the awarding of public works contracts by Rabbé's
ministry. Early in January 2001, local press reports quoted Rabbé
as saying he was the victim of a campaign of personal destruction by some
journalists.
Radio and television stations owned by Ángel González, a Mexican
national who is Rabbé's brother-in-law, also waged a campaign to
discredit elPeriódico. Through front companies, González
owns all four of Guatemala's private television stations, in violation
of constitutional prohibitions against media monopolies and foreign ownership
of media.
González has been a leading financial contributor to Guatemalan
president Alfonso Portillo Cabrera's political campaigns, and Rabbé
himself is a former executive in González's media empire. According
to local sources, television crews from González's stations arrived
outside elPeriódico 20 minutes before the attack.
In a February 22 letter to President Portillo Cabrera, CPJ urged him
to ensure that all journalists in Guatemala are able to work without fear
of threats or intimidation.
March 27
Silvia Gereda, elPeriódico
ATTACKED, THREATENED
Luis Escobar, elPeriódico
THREATENED
Enrique Castañeda, elPeriódico
THREATENED
Walter Martín Juárez Ruiz, elPeriódico
ATTACKED, THREATENED
Escobar and Castañeda, reporters for the Guatemala City daily
elPeriódico, were threatened after they broke a scandal
involving the state-controlled bank Crédito Hipotecario Nacional
(CHN).
Gereda and Juárez, respectively the investigative editor and
a reporter with the paper, were also menaced over elPeriódico's
coverage of the scandal.
On March 26, elPeriódico broke a major story about irregular
CHN loans totaling 47 million quetzales (US$6 million). elPeriódico
reported that some of these loans were to companies and individuals
with close links to CHN stockholders and the bank's president, José
Armando Llort.
On March 27, in direct response to elPeriódico's reporting,
the Banking Supervision Office ordered CHN to recover the total loan amount
by the end of the month. On April 3, Llort and five other members of the
CHN board of directors resigned. According to local press reports, President
Alfonso Portillo Cabrera personally asked Llort to give up his post.
After the elPeriódico story broke, Llort placed several
advertisements in local newspapers threatening legal action against media
that covered the CHN story, according to CPJ sources in Guatemala.
On March 27, meanwhile, a man who identified himself as a CHN employee
approached Gereda and said that Llort wanted to kill her as well as her
colleagues Escobar and Castañeda. The man claimed that the elPeriódico
journalists were being watched and filmed.
He then produced a folder containing personal information about Gereda
and her family. He also gave her an oral account of Escobar and Castañeda's
daily schedule.
That evening, Gereda told CPJ, another individual approached her and
grabbed her by the neck as she left her literature class at the Universidad
del Valle. After insulting Gereda, the man said theyan obvious reference
to elPeriódico journalistswould be killed if they
kept making trouble. Gereda was unable to identify the attacker.
On the morning of March 28, Gereda noticed a car with tinted windows
parked outside her house. In the afternoon, Castañeda was trailed
by an unregistered red vehicle.
Later that day, Gereda filed a complaint with the United Nations Verification
Mission in Guatemala (MINUGUA), which monitors compliance with the peace
agreements that ended Guatemala's long-running civil war. The next day,
Gereda went to the Public Ministry and filed another complaint. Ministry
officials provided her with several letters ordering police units based
near the paper's offices to provide assistance in case of an emergency.
Also on March 28, following a phone conversation with Byron Barrera,
President Portillo's secretary of social communication, CPJ issued a public
statement expressing its concern about the threats against the elPeriódico
journalists.
On March 30 at around 8 p.m., two masked gunmen in a car intercepted
Juárez while he was driving in downtown Guatemala City. The attackers
got out of their car and pointed their handguns at Juárez's head.
Before fleeing the scene, the men told the journalist that they were going
to kill him, Gereda, Escobar, and Castañeda because of elPeriódico's
work.
In a state of nervous collapse, Juárez sought refuge in a nearby
fire station, where he was given a tranquilizer.
August 1
Eddy Castillo, elPeriódico
ATTACKED
Mynor de León, Prensa Libre
ATTACKED
Sandra Sebastián, Siglo Veintiuno
ATTACKED
Marvin del Cid, Emisoras Unidas
ATTACKED
Castillo, de León, Sebastián, and del Cid were attacked
by police officers while covering public demonstrations against a two
percent increase in the value-added tax.
As the protest ended on the afternoon of August 1 near Guatemala City's
Plaza de la Constitución, a group of demonstrators engaged in a
street battle with officers from the Civil National Police, who used tear
gas and fired pistols into the air to disperse the crowds.
When police moved to make arrests, journalists attempted to interview
and photograph the protesters who were being detained. The police tried
to push the journalists away and beat up at least four of them. Police
also shouted that they did not want to see any journalists around.
Members of the media who were assaulted by riot police included: Castillo,
a reporter for the daily elPeriódico; de León, a
photographer for the daily Prensa Libre, whose camera was destroyed;
Sebastián, a photographer for the daily Siglo Veintiuno;
and del Cid, a reporter for the radio station Emisoras Unidas.
Various sources reported that the assault occurred in front of police
chief Santos Estrada Marroquín, who was in charge of riot control
in the area. Apparently, he did not intervene.
On August 6, CPJ sent a letter of inquiry to Adolfo González
Rodas, the attorney general of Guatemala, expressing its concerns about
the attack and urging a prompt and thorough investigation.
September 5
Jorge Mynor Alegría Armendáriz, Radio Amatique
KILLED
Enrique Aceituno, Radio Amatique
THREATENED
Alegría, host of the call-in show "Línea Directa," was
shot at least five times outside his home in Puerto Barrios, a port city
located on the Caribbean coast in Izabal Department.
Alegría, who also worked as a part-time correspondent for the
national radio network Emisoras Unidas, had reportedly been threatened
on three different occasions after broadcasting stories about corruption.
In addition, one of his colleagues told the press that local officials
had tried to bribe Alegría to keep him quiet about their activities.
Police detained two suspects in connection with Alegría's murder.
One suspect had a 9 mm handgun whose bullets apparently matched those
found at the crime scene. Preliminary investigations by the Puerto Barrios
prosecutor's office revealed that the handgun had recently fired six shots.
On September 20, the Ombudsman's Office for Human Rights (PDH) released
the results of its investigations. The report concluded that Alegría's
murder was politically motivated and was probably masterminded by local
officials in retaliation for the journalist's coverage of corruption in
Puerto Barrios. The PDH added that the two suspects in police custody
were scapegoats. A report with the PDH's findings was sent to the newly
created Prosecutor's Office for Crimes against Journalists.
In early October, the two suspects were released after ballistics testing
proved that the confiscated handgun was not the murder weapon.
At year's end, the Puerto Barrios prosecutor's office and police were
investigating Alegría's murder as either a crime of passion, a
politically motivated crime, or a common crime. However, they have not
offered any evidence to support their theories. According to the news
agency CERIGUA, a local prosecutor declared that a political motivation
could neither be ruled out nor confirmed.
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