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While President Hugo Banzer's government used the state intelligence
apparatus to intimidate journalists, the Bolivian press continued to report
aggressively on a number of public scandals.
Banzer, a general who led a military government from 1971 to 1978, publicly
embraced press freedom after he was democratically elected president in
1997. But many local journalists are skeptical about the sincerity of
his promise.
In an example cited by the Sindicato de Trabajadores de La Prensa de La
Paz, a local press union, Interior Minister Walter Guiteras ordered government
agents to investigate and track journalists who covered a drug scandal
involving Marco Marino Diodato, the husband of Banzer's niece. Diodato,
an Italian citizen employed by the Bolivian military as a special communications
and arms expert, was arrested on June 17 and accused of heading the Santa
Cruz Connection, an international narcotics ring. After falling out with
the government, Diodato publicly alleged that the Banzer administration
was carrying out widespread telephone interception within government agencies.
In response to growing concern about wiretapping, a locally based U.S.
company volunteered to check the telephone systems of local media for
bugs. On September 12, technicians discovered hidden microphones in the
office of the director of La Razón newspaper and in the
offices of the chairman and vice president of the ATB television network.
Both La Razón and ATB are owned by Raúl Garáfulic,
the owner of Comunicaciones El País S.A., the largest multimedia
company in Bolivia. He told CPJ that it was unclear whether the microphones
had been placed by intelligence organizations within the Bolivian government
or by drug traffickers angered by his media's critical coverage of the
coca trade.
Banzer publicly apologized for a July 21 police assault on journalists
and photographers covering a protest march held by the Bolivian Labor
Union (COB) in La Paz. But the apology backfired when he also warned journalists
to "be prudent." Press associations and unions organized an anti-Banzer
demonstration the next day to show their discontent.
Bolivian journalists also complained about the administration's practice
of selectively placing state advertising in media outlets that cover the
government favorably.
March 2
Informe R HARASSED
A group of suspected government intelligence agents tried to seize the
March 3 edition of the monthly magazine Informe R. The cover of
the magazine featured a photomontage of former Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet and current Bolivian President Hugo Banzer. Part of the montage
was based on a picture of Banzer taken when he was dictator of Bolivia
in the 1970s.
After repeated electrical problems delayed the publication of the magazine,
staff at the Center of Documentation and Information (CEDOIN), which published
Informe R at the time, noticed they were being watched by a number
of individuals stationed outside their offices. At 8 p.m., director Ruy
Omar Suárez was stopped outside CEDOIN by a group of eight to 10
individuals who demanded that he hand over the next day's edition of Informe
R.
Suárez notified opposition congressman Juan de Granados. When the
two men returned to the offices, they found the same group trying to make
off with the magazines. When asked for identification, they all fled,
except for a woman who identified her colleagues only as members of the
police. Later, Granados and Suárez recognized the intruders' vehicle
and followed it to the Central Intelligence Office. The same individuals
got out of the car and entered the building.
The following day, March 3, the Sindicato de Periodistas de La Paz, a
local press union, distributed the magazine and filed a complaint with
Interior Minister Guido Nayer. In a press conference later that day, Nayer
blamed the attempted confiscation on Granados, accusing him of resorting
to this tactic for his own political gain. Days earlier, Granados had
launched a new political party known as the Fearless Movement (MSM), after
leaving his previous party, the Free Bolivia Movement (MBL). Both parties
are opposed to the ruling party of President Banzer.
A former editor of the magazine, Silvana Ruiz, told CPJ that Nayer also
threatened to take the magazine's editors to court for defaming the president.
However, President Banzer promised not to pursue the case. Findings from
an investigation conducted by the Bolivian public defender found government
officials responsible for the attempted seizure. No further action was
taken.
August 29
Edgar Toro, Presencia ATTACKED, THREATENED
City council member David Foronda attacked Toro, El Alto correspondent
for the La Paz-based newspaper Presencia.
In June, Toro had published a report implicating Foronda and three other
council members in a corruption scandal. For the next two months, Foronda
threatened to take Toro to court for damaging his reputation. During those
same months, the journalist also received a number of anonymous death
threats by telephone.
On August 29, Toro ran into Foronda and his wife in El Alto. Foronda's
wife began insulting the journalist. Then Foronda, an ex-wrestler, attacked
Toro, breaking several ribs. Authorities were apparently slow to investigate
both the attack and the corruption scandal. The attorney general finally
contacted Toro in October. But the journalist declined to cooperate with
an investigation because he felt that too much time had passed.
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