New
York, September 15, 2005—Mexican President Vicente Fox said today
he will ask his nation's attorney general to appoint a special prosecutor
to investigate crimes against free expression, a commitment made after
a series of deadly attacks against journalists in Mexico's northern states.
Meeting with a delegation from the Committee to Protect Journalists at
the organization's Manhattan headquarters, Fox called the appointment
a "strong and good step forward" and pledged to meet with Attorney General
Daniel Cabeza de Vaca on Monday to move forward with the plan.
"We have the same worries and we have the same commitment to work on this,"
Fox told the delegation led by Paul Steiger, CPJ chairman and Wall
Street Journal managing editor. "We have to work specifically on the
problem of people in the press who are suffering."
Fox also promised to consider creation of a panel of national experts
to evaluate how federal authorities can become more involved in fighting
crimes against the press. He said he would discuss the matter with Cabeza
de Vaca.
CPJ research shows that northern Mexico, particularly the region along
the U.S.-Mexican border, has become one of the most dangerous places in
Latin America for journalists to do their jobs. In its meeting with Fox
and presidential advisers, the CPJ delegation said Mexican journalists
are targeted for their coverage of sensitive issues such as drug trafficking,
organized crime, and political corruption.
"This is very important for Mexico and free expression," said CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper. Noting that impunity in the murders of journalists
is a problem in countries throughout the world, Cooper said: "If some
very serious headway is made in Mexico ... it would be seen as a shining
example to the rest of the world."
Four Mexican journalists have been killed in direct reprisal for their
work in the last five years, CPJ research shows. The organization is investigating
the slayings of five other journalists, whose murders may also be related
to their work. Yet another reporter—Alfredo Jiménez Mota of the
Hermosillo daily El Imparcial—has been missing since April 2 and
is feared dead.
Murder is a state crime, and state prosecutors usually investigate slayings
in Mexico. But Fox has said that violence against the press is a national
problem, and has pledged his government's commitment to protect journalists.
State investigations of journalist murders have stalled or moved forward
only sluggishly, CPJ research shows. State and local authorities are more
prone to corruption, have fewer resources, and are subject to less accountability,
CPJ found.
CPJ had sent the president's office a two-part proposal before the meeting,
urging greater and more permanent involvement by federal authorities in
the investigation of crimes against free expression. Protection of free
expression is particularly urgent, CPJ representatives said, as Mexicans
prepare for presidential elections in July 2006.
As proposed by CPJ, a special prosecutor would investigate violence or
threatened violence aimed at preventing the right to free expression guaranteed
by articles 6 and 7 of the Mexican Constitution. The prosecutor would
work under supervision of the attorney general.
The special prosecutor would evaluate crimes against free expression,
determining which should be directly prosecuted by federal authorities
and monitoring the progress of all cases. CPJ asked that the prosecutor's
appointment be made in consultation with the media and with press and
free expression organizations. The nominee, CPJ suggested, should be widely
respected in Mexican society.
At CPJ's request, Fox said he would consider creation of a panel to evaluate
greater federal involvement in combating crimes against journalists. CPJ
urged that the panel consist of experts in free expression, and that it
issue a public report and recommendations within six months.
The CPJ delegation also included Deputy Director Joel Simon; Americas
Program Coordinator Carlos Lauría; and board members Josh Friedman,
Cheryl Gould, Michael Massing, Geraldine Fabrikant-Metz, and Franz Allina.
Today's meeting followed a CPJ trip to Mexico City in June. Meeting
with José Luis Vasconcelos, the top prosecutor in the organized
crime division of the federal attorney general's office, CPJ officials
expressed concern about the slow pace of investigations into the murders
of Mexican journalists. CPJ submitted a detailed analysis of murder cases
since 2000, the year Fox was elected president. Federal authorities
have already stepped in to take over three investigations of murdered
journalists.

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