Click here to read more about press freedom conditions in GUATEMALA.
New
York, April 28, 2000 --- A photographer for the Guatemala City
daily Prensa Libre was killed yesterday and two other journalists
were injured when private security guards opened fire on rioters in
Guatemala City.
The incident took place after 2 p.m. on the afternoon of April 27,
when demonstrators protesting a bus-fare increase announced earlier
this week tried to vandalize an auto parts store in downtown Guatemala
City. Private security guards on the roof of the store opened fire
on the crowd, hitting the three journalists and several other bystanders,
according to CPJ sources in Guatemala and press accounts.
Roberto Martínez, 37 and the father of six, was shot twice
and later pronounced dead at the San Juan de Dios hospital. Christian
Alejandro García, a cameraman for the television news program
"Notisiete," and Julio Cruz, a reporter with the Guatemala City daily
Siglo Veintiuno, were both injured and are being treated in
the San Juan de Dios hospital.
Two bystanders, Josefina Ceballos and Sergio Jiovanni Ortíz
Vásquez, were also killed. Local sources reported sixteen injured
in total.
Journalists at the scene identified and detained the two security
guards, who are now in police custody, according to CPJ sources. At
the time of the attack, Martínez was carrying a camera and
was surrounded by colleagues who also carried cameras and other professional
equipment, clearly identifying them as journalists.
"CPJ is saddened and disturbed by this tragic violation of press freedom
in Guatemala," noted CPJ's executive director Ann K. Cooper. "We will
be monitoring the investigation closely to ensure that it is thorough,
complete, and carried out in a timely manner. In addition, we call
on Guatemalan authorities to support the work of the press by making
every possible effort to ensure that journalists currently working
under dangerous conditions are able to carry out their work safely."
END