|
|

58th IAPA General Assembly
JW Marriott Hotel & Stellaris Casino Lima
October 26-29, Peru
|
|
CONCLUSIONS
Tim Lopes, an investigative reporter for the television
network O Globo, was kidnapped, tortured and murdered. His body was dismembered,
burned and secretly buried. The uproar this horrendous murder caused forced
the authorities to act quickly and arrest the suspects.
In another instance, the owner and publisher of Folha do Estado in the city
of Cuiabá was shot six times and killed for publishing investigative
reports denouncing the installation of slot machines in his state.
Colombia is still subject to the brutality of drug traffickers, guerrillas
and paramilitary forces. In the last six months, four reporters were killed
because of their work; in two other cases the motives remain unknown. In Venezuela,
photographer Jorge Tortoza lost his life at a demonstration instigated by
President Hugo Chávez’s inflammatory rhetoric. There were other
murders in Ecuador, Bolivia and Mexico, the motives for which remain unknown.
Ironically, at the same time, the “industry” of lawsuits against
newspapers and journalists has grown. It reached such a point that the Bar
Association in Paraiba, Brazil, reported that there are lawyers who try to
make money by “hunting” for people who allegedly have been libeled
and persuading them to sue for very large punitive damage awards.
Within the climate of continuous harassment of the press in Venezuela a bill
called the Enabling Law for Citizen Participation has been introduced. It
would create a National Council to Oversee the Media made up of neighborhood
associations that would have the authority to impose fines or to order the
closure of any media outlet that violated its regulations.
In some Caribbean countries it has been suggested that the Organization of
Eastern Caribbean States try to establish a code of ethics for the media,
resulting in essence with state officials setting rules of conduct for those
who exercise press freedom. The right of freedom of expression cannot and
should not be subject to commissions and special rules, nor licensing, university
degrees or membership in colegios. In this context, objections should be raised
to regulations and bills in Nicaragua, Panama, Colombia, the Dominican Republic
and Guatemala.
Many governments wish to control the flow of news and opinion, and they can
use the proposed World Summit on the Information Society to be held in Geneva
in December 2003 for this purpose.
Freely expressing opinions is still a crime punishable by imprisonment in
Cuba. Dissemination of news abroad is also sanctioned, and the government
has gone to the extreme of announcing the loss of rights of inmates in prison
because a journalist held there sent out information.
War or the threat of war has contributed to the erosion of access to information
in the United States. American news organizations have made requests, even
in courts, to obtain such basic information as the names of about 1,200 people
who have been detained following the September 11 terrorist attacks, without
success.
In this context, the meetings about Justice and the Press in Washington, D.C.,
and Buenos Aires take on greater importance. At both meetings, judges of Supreme
Court and journalists from throughout the hemisphere affirmed that press freedom
and an independent judiciary are indispensable to one another. These principles
guarantee the exercise of the people’s rights, which is what defines
democracy.
questions
or comments? e-mail us
Copyright © 2003 Inter American Press Association.
All rights reserved.
. | |
|